sophiecentaur said:
I guess the answer wasn't presented on a plate and he's gone elsewhere.
We are soooo unhelpful.
Haha no sir. I just couldn't read the comments right away. I also didn't expect you guys to reply so fast !
sophiecentaur said:
Think about elephants and fleas then do some googling for ideas.
Any relevant Laws need to be applied with a bit of poetic license and open-mindedness. If you look at small animals that jump, they are not built with the same proportions that you are. What's different about them?
Well if we look on grasshopper so obviously its legs are way longer than the rest of the body. But in the problem I posted obviously the body doesn't change its structure but only gets shrunk.
BvU said:
Hello Daniel,
Interesting challenge. Not meant to be delegated to others, but something for you to think about.
PF culture wants you to make a start and he we'll help you with questions like
"If I'm shrunk by a factor of 100, what will be my length, weight, lung capacity, etc ?" and "How does that relate to my jumping capabilities ?"
Thank you very much !
I'm sorry I guess I missed 'PD culture' thread. I'll make sure to respect the culture from now on.
hilbert2 said:
Suppose a mini human of mass ##m## is able to give itself an upward kinetic energy of ##K = Cm## by jumping. The ##C## is a constant with units Joule/kilogram. This should be reasonable as the mass of the muscles is proportional to the mass of the whole person. If you equate ##K = mgh##, where ##m## is the same mass, ##g## is the gravitational acceleration and ##h## is the maximum height that can be reached by jumping, what happens to the relative magnitude of ##h## compared to the length of the mini human when mass ##m## is decreased?
If we're saying that ## Cm = mgh ## and C is constant, so we get that ##h = g/C##
So you're saying that the maximum height doesn't change ?
But are you sure we can assume that C is constant? isn't that as we get smaller, it's not necessarily that the relationship between the kinetic energy produced by our muscles (K) and our mass (m) would be linear ?
Dale said:
Think about what determines a muscle’s strength. Hint: it is not its mass.
From 9 years of doing track and field I learned that the muscle strength depends on the quality of the muscle fibers.
But I just googled and read this article that says that a muscle strength depends on the cross-sectional area. Is that what you mean ?
If that so then how does it make sense?
say that my muscle width and depth are:
##10 cm x 15 cm = 150 cm^2##,
if I get shrunk to a size of a nickel my muscles dimension will be about:
##1 mm x 1.5 mm = 1.5 mm^2##
so it's a way small decrease than a linear one.