selftaught said:
Thanks AlephZero. For the first time in a couple of weeks I feel I'm finally getting somewhere.
I think I've got the concepts of force, work, and energy sorted, but my description of my problem and attempting to put it into technical terms may be suggesting I don't.
My area of interest is injury and injury science defines injury in terms of 'exposure' to energy. Some refer to 'transfer' of energy. It's easy to conceptualise the transfer of KE from a moving bat to a shin, but, with a falling body it's difficult to see any transfer of energy given the Earth does not possesses any mechanical energy (assuming no deformation).
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3. Your energy 'locked' in deformation explanation. Just been reading about 'irreversible energy conversions', 'inelastic energy', and plastic deformation. Gerry Carr in Sport Mechanics for Coaches describes strain energy as 'ability to restore themselves back to their original shape after being squashed, etc'. The idea of inelastic energy I just cannot understand at this point. Energy is defined as the capacity to do work. How does the dented body of a car after a crash possesses the ability to apply a force over a distance?
4. I was going to leave this question for another thread, but since I've got your attention, law of conservation of energy, in a fall, gravitationl potential energy is converted to KE, and on impact that KE is converted to sound and heat energy. Assuming the ground does not deform, the person's body deforms so the KE accumulated during the fall is converted to strain energy. But when the deformation exceeds the physiological tolerance levels and say bones are broken, that strain energy is converted to what (given that energy is neither created nor destroyed, but only changes form)? Some will be to sound energy as the bone breaks, some heat; but is there any other transformations or is all the strain energy (or KE) converted only to sound and heat?
Thanks by the way. Cheers
You've been getting some great answers, maybe I can add a little.
when someone falls, energy is not transferred from the ground to the person. Instead, what happens is that the potential energy (becasue the person was high up) converts to kinetic energy (the person is now moving), and upon contact, is converted into something else: what form it takes next depends on how contact occurs.
Consider a person jumping off a table onto the floor. Unless they are drunk (or stupid), they will not just fall flat on the ground, but as they hit the ground, they will absorb the impact by using their muscles and joints, ending in some sort of crouched position before standing up and walking away. All of the energy that was made available by falling (converting potential energy into kinetic energy) was absorbed by the person's body by an *elastic* collision: ignoring muscle physiology, the energy was absorbed by stretching out muscles, which act like springs. The muscles return to the nominal lengths, everything is back to the way it was, and no energy was dissipated ('lost') in this case. Now, including muscle physiology, the energy was in fact dissipated by the muscles as they contracted to resist and slow the motion after contact with the floor, and because the person had to expend energy to stand up.
Now consider the drunk who falls off the bar and lands on his shoulder, dislocating it. Now, instead of the energy being absorbed by springs, all the energy went into dislocating the shoulder. And damaging the soft tissue, perhaps tearing ligaments, etc. etc. Now, when the person stands up, their body has been damaged in a way that did not occur above- it has undergone a *plastic* deformation.
But you already know this, as you mention in point 4. What you missed was that breaking/tearing/etc is *also* a conversion of energy. The mechanism is not completely understood, but as stress is applied and an object undergoes strain, that "strain energy" is initially elastic: the material acts like a spring ("elastic deformation'), and will return to the original shape if the stress is removed. Increasing the applied stress, the material then deforms irreversibly ('plastic deformation'), and that permanent deformation is the result of an object absorbing energy- the energy has dissipated, and cannot be recovered to perform work. At some point, fracture occurs, and some of the stress energy is used to create additional surface.