Posts Tagged ‘speed’

 

Usain-Bolt

Not Exactly Rocket Science

 

 

Will we ever run the 100 metres in 9 seconds?

By Ed Yong | July 18, 2012 7:54 am

Here’s the ninth piece from my BBC column

In 2008, at the Beijing Olympic Games, Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt ran the 100m in just 9.69 seconds, setting a new world record. A year later, Bolt surpassed his own feat with an astonishing 9.58-second run at the 2009 Berlin World Championships. With the 2012 Olympic Games set to begin in London, the sporting world hopes Bolt will overcome his recent hamstring problems and lead yet another victorious attack on the sprinting record. He is arguably the fastest man in history, but just how fast could be possibly go?

That’s a surprisingly difficult question to answer, and ploughing through the record books is of little help. “People have played with the statistical data so much and made so many predictions. I don’t think people who work on mechanics take them very seriously,” says John Hutchinson, who studies how animals move at the Royal Veterinary College in London, UK.

The problem is that the progression of sprinting records is characterised by tortoise-like lulls and hare-like… well… sprints. People are getting faster, but in an unpredictable way. From 1991 to 2007, eight athletes chipped 0.16 seconds off the record. Bolt did the same in just over one year. Before 2008, mathematician Reza Noubary calculated that “the ultimate time for [the] 100 meter dash is 9.44 seconds.” Following Bolt’s Beijing performance, he told Wired that the prediction “would probably go down a little bit”.

John Barrow from the University of Cambridge – another mathematician – has identified three ways in which Bolt could improve his speed: being quicker off the mark; running with a stronger tailwind; and running at higher altitudes where thinner air would exert less drag upon him. These tricks may work, but they’re also somewhat unsatisfying. We really want to know whether flexing muscles and bending joints could send a sprinter over the finish line in 9 seconds, without relying on environmental providence.

To answer that, we have to look at the physics of a sprinting leg. And that means running headfirst into a wall of ignorance. “It’s tougher to get a handle on sprinting mechanics than on feats of strength or endurance,” says Peter Weyand from Southern Methodist University, who has been studying the science of running for decades. By comparison, Weyand says that we can tweak a cyclist’s weight, position and aerodynamic shape, and predict how that will affect their performance in the Tour de France. “We know down to 1%, or maybe even smaller, what sort of performance bumps you’ll get,” he says. In sprinting, it’s a black hole. You don’t have those sorts of predictive relationships.”

Our ignorance is understandable. By their nature, sprints are very short, so scientists can only make measurements in a limited window of time. On top of that, the factors that govern running speed are anything but intuitive.

Sole power

Weyand divides each cycle of a runner’s leg into what happens when their foot is in the air, and what happens when it’s on the ground. The former is surprisingly irrelevant. Back in 2000, Weyand showed that, at top speed, every runner takes around a third of a second to pick their foot up and put it down again. “It’s the same from Usain Bolt to Grandma,” he says. “She can’t run as fast as him but at her top speed, she’s repositioning her foot at the same speed.”

That third of a second in the air – the swing time – is probably close to a biological limit. Weyand thinks that there is very little that people can do to improve on it, with a notable exception. Oscar Pistorius, the South African double-amputee, runs on artificial carbon-fibre legs that each weigh less than half of what a normal fleshy limb would do. With this lighter load, he can swing his legs around 20% faster than a runner with intact limbs, moving at the same speed.

For most runners though, speed is largely determined by how much force they can apply when their foot is on the ground. They have two simple options for running faster: hit the ground harder, or exert the same force over a longer period.

The second option partly explains why greyhounds and cheetahs are so fast. They maximise their time on the ground using their bendy backbones. As their front feet land, their spines bend and collapse, so their back halves spend more time in the air before they have to come down. Then, their spines decompress, giving their front halves more time in the air and their back legs more time on the ground.

Such tricks aren’t available to us two-legged humans, but technology provides alternatives. In the 1990s, speed skaters started using a new breed of “clap skates” where the blade is hinged to the front of the boot, rather than firmly fixed. As the skaters pushed back, the new design kept their blades in longer contact with the ice, allowing them to exert the same force over more time. Speed records suddenly fell.

People have tried to duplicate the same effect with running shoes, but with little success. That’s because a running leg behaves a bit like a pogo stick. As it hits the ground, it compresses. As it steps off, it gets a bit of elastic rebound. Technologies that try to alter a runner’s gait tend to interfere with this rebound, and diminish the leg’s overall performance. “It’s hard to intervene in a similar manner to the clap-skates without buggering up the other mechanics of the limb,” says Weyand. (Again, Pistorius bucks the trend because his artificial legs are springier than natural ones, and give him around 10% longer on the ground than other runners.)

Ground force

For those with intact limbs, one option remains: exert more force on the ground. Put simply, fast people hit the ground more forcefully than slow people, relative to their body weight. But we know very little about what contributes to that force, and we are terrible at predicting it based on a runner’s physique or movements.

We know that champion male sprinters can hit the ground with a force that’s around 2.5 times their body weight (most people manage around two times). When Usain Bolt’s foot lands, it applies around 900 pounds (400kg) of force for a few milliseconds, and continues pushing for around 90 more.

Weyand likes to imagine a weightlifter trying to apply the same force in a one-legged squat – they would come nowhere close.  “What we know about force under static conditions under-predicts how hard sprinters hit by a factor of two,” he says. “We just don’t have the ability to go from the movements of the body to the force on the ground.” Even if a sprinter’s muscles were eventually boosted by gene doping techniques, we have no way of calculating how much faster their owners would run.

Studies are underway to fill in those gaps, and Weyand is hoping that we’ll be able to make better predictions in five or 10 years. Just a few months ago, Marcus Pandy from the University of Melbourne used computer simulations of sprinters to show that the calf muscles, more than any others, determine the amount of force that runners apply to the ground. At top speeds, the hip muscles become increasingly important too. “Maybe if you train a sprinter, you could potentially train them to have really strong calves,” says Hutchinson.

For the moment, however, any predictions about the ceilings of human speed are still ill-informed ones. The only way to work out if Bolt or some other sprinter will smash the existing record is to watch them.

Image by PhotoBobil

 

Like Christopher Columbus,Marco Polo,Zheng He,Ibn Battutta,Francis Light,Vasco Da Gama,Genghiz Khan and many other Explorers the World possessed,we experienced the discoveries of new far away lands and made humans or citizens of the world closer either by peaceful means or by horrible warfares and conquests.The map of the world were redrawn many times as a result of these discoveries and conquests.Malacca was more widely known than Malaysia as a country and traders from all over the world know Malacca as an international port where trading of products like spices,silks,gold and precious stones,potteries,timber are all made available here.

Likewise in the modern world after World War 2,new discoveries are found not in discoveries of new lands but more for technology,inventions of new machines,medicines,processed food and beverages,equipment both small and big sizes,automobiles and aeroplanes and so many others.

With better communication,transportation and networking of people from distant lands we now embraced globalization  like “hell” and once where we use to be so far away can now communicate and collaborate in just a matter of short time and businesses are made to flourish easily and everywhere.Trade are expanded and business grow and  grow to unprecedented heights!

Products like Facebook or Yahoo Mail have created many hundred of millions of users on a daily basis like eg.Facebook where they reported a daily traffic or active users about 850 million people!Imagine the marketing opportunities and trading that can be created when you have 850 million users everyday!

Only challenge that we humans still faced is TIME factor!We live all over the world with time zones of GMT 0.01 to GMT 24.00 like London having a GMT of 12.00 and Kuala Lumpur a GMT of 20.00 (a difference of +8 hours)

So if we are having a meeting at 9 am in London then it is 5pm in Kuala Lumpur and we will definitely feel different since the daylight conditions are different,our body conditions too plus a host of other differences when time is concerned!

When we have a “LIVE Telecast” of a football match in Tokyo at 8 pm then it will be morning time in time zones like in Europe?The good thing we are able to see the football match at the same time (same viewing) but not at the convenient time we actually prefer.During the “good boxing days” of Muhammad Ali or World Cup Fever,TV viewers may have to watch their Live TV at odd hours where some at dinner time,some at breakfast time,some at lunch time and some at early hours of the morning or night!

Maybe that we cannot change at all and thats why we also said “the only thing that is constant is change” and time is always on the move and once lost we will never get it back again.Thats life and as time goes by we too get old or aged!

Globalization is Great but make Globalization with Harmony,Peace,Prosperity for all Humans.Only by constantly adding value in our lives can Globalization really bring the benefits to all humans no matter where they live or in what time zones they are having!

 

Yesterday,Ramli met an old friend Dato’SM Zulkifli SM Amin (the late Tan Sri SM Nasimuddin’s younger brother)at the Malaysia Sports Tourism Council (MSTC) Event themed as “Sports Tourism 2010-Sustaining Sports Tourism Forum” held at Zamrud Room,Saujana Hotel Subang.

Ramli have bought altogether 3 cars from NAZA Motor Trading Sdn.Bhd.The cars that Ramli bought in the early Naza Motor Trading car business was a Datsun 120Y,Toyota 5-door can and Galant Sigma wagon.All the cars are RECON cars and Ramli loved them as they all look brand new and you get a fresh (new) registration number.Nowadays,NAZA sells all the luxury and top branded cars plus the normal Proton,NazaKia and others for their “hungry” customers.Ramli’s 1st car was the Datsun 120Y bought in 1980 at only RM7,600.00 and Tan Sri SM Nasimuddin was the salesman.Malaysia really lost a great businessman and 1malaysian in the late Allahyarham Tan Sri SM Nasimuddin.Ramli have also purchased other cars like Daihatsu Rocky Jeep,Proton Saga and Iswara,Perodua Rusa, and a few more.As of today,Ramli have purchased and used almost 10 cars…what’s the next car for Ramli?

Nowadays with great careful planning and leadership succession plans,Naza Motor Trading Sdn Bhd is a “Giant Malaysian Co” with business interests in motor trading,bikes,afer sales services/accessories,manufacturing,transport services,training,plantation,ciagarette distribution,F&B,credit &leasing,water crafts,properties,hotel operation and insurance agent.

Naza’s business is a great Malaysian Success Story from a small motor trading company to become a Giant Conglomorate with business interests in many industries employing almost over 4000 people.Hopefully with continual Great Leadership and Great People will help create a Greater Business with Greater Satisfaction to the Customers and Employees and stakeholders alike.

So,for Ramli’s Dream Cars…see the videos below: