Skyscrapers are pretty high but they can only go so high before they become unstable and susceptible to the high winds and also there's the whole problem with lift shafts and pumping water around etc.
Now a pyramid building would be completely stable and would never topple over and with it designed like it is plenty of lift shaft could be fitted in to allow travelling to all levels.
For a pyramid building to be stable it has to be at a certain angle.
What angle would it be stable at? 45 degrees would be most stable I suppose but surely it could rise at a steeper angle and still remain stable?
The shallower the angle, the more stable. 45 degrees isn't a special angle for engineering.
Now for my ultimate question: If we were to build a pyramid so the tip of the Pyramid reached orbit (orbit being in this case the location where the Earths atmosphere borders the Vacuum of space which is 75 miles I think??) how steep could we have the pyramid and how much land area would it need to take up in order to have a pyramid at that angle and at that height?
If we look at this purely from a physics point of view, the relevant factors are compressive stresses on the structure, and whether or not it is likely to topple.
For granite, a typically strong construction material, the compressive strength is about 200 x 10^6 N/m^2
It has a density of 2650 kg/m^3
For a pillar, the compressive stress on the base computes as
= density * gravity (9.8) * height
So a perfect granite pillar erected on the surface of the earth could theoretically support it's own weight upto a height of around 7700 m high, or 7.7 kilometers. Any higher than this and the base would certainly deform.
In a pyramid you're using a greater base, so it can support more weight.
The volume of a pyramid is = Area of the base * Height * 1/3
The compressive stress on the base would therefore be:
= density * volume * gravity / base area
= density * gravity * (base area * height * 1/3) / base area
= density * gravity * height / 3
200 x 10^6 = 2650 * 9.8 * Height / 3
So you could build a granite pyramid no more than 3 times higher than a granite pillar, which is a pyramid no higher than 23km. Notice that the slope angle does not affect the compressive stress on the base at all.
So the answer is no it can't be done with today's construction materials. Diamond maybe. This calculation also has tentative implications for the maximum possible heights of mountain ranges, which are nature's own pyramids.
Incidentally, the difference between the highest (Everest) and lowest (Mariana's Trench) on Earth is about 20km, which sits nicely within the 23km bounds, and may or may not be relevant.
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