Time up = time down and your ridiculous "suction-cup" baloney is not cutting it.
My "suction" hypothesis is just that - hypothesis. In the absence of articles to source our ideas, seems like we're both hypothesizing here.
Likewise, your claim of friction seems like a worse hypothesis to me.. How do you propose horizontal friction will result in vertical motion?
Perhaps the best hypothesis is adhesion. If you can find an article on this, great, share it, and I'll learn from it.
Where does that leave us?
1. The sand rises to the same level as the bottom of the boot. Why?
2. A wide boot rising DOES cause an upcurrent of air - and this would reduce air impedence. Do you disagree?
3. IF there are forces pulling it up as it rises (e.g. impact of low-pressure) - this alters the parabola (which only applies if Gravity-alone operates on it)
Other considerations:
1. As we see with "the Salute" we see to the inside of the Left Boot Dust rising FASTER than the boot - which indicates that within the chaos at lift off, somehow, some dust was launched FASTER than the boot. If on the moon - this would result in that sand going considerably HIGHER than the boot rise, and would fall AFTER the boot falls.
2. When we see the darkness beneath Cernan's foot, we have no idea if any of this dust was also, like with Young, kicked up faster than the boot rise...
3. For BOTH cases, Cernan and Young - we do see the dust that was even with the bottom of the boot fall way faster than the boot. This is NOT how it should work on the moon.Your example of volleyball jump showed sand that rose much LESS than the foot... so doesn't match what we see with these lunar clips.
Here is a clip of a volleyball jump that caused the sand to rise as high as the foot (or a bit higher) -- and as we can see it fall WITH the foot, NOT BEFORE. This is a rule.
Generally, "Time Up = Time Down" -- both foot and sand rose together -- and fell together. But with Cernan and Young, they do not.
https://youtu.be/XLjPKjppy_0?t=21IN SHORT - what force made the sand rise isn't vital to the argument. It's secondary. And we're both just guessing at this point. But we do know that Dust that rises with the bottom of the foot, should fall with the bottom of the foot. And that this dust, when in the air, always looks DARK... you can see it when elevated above the ground.