Impact Force after falling of a chair

AI Thread Summary
Calculating the impact force when a person falls backward from a chair involves understanding the deceleration upon hitting the floor, which is influenced by the angle of the fall. The chair's dimensions and the pendulum effect complicate the calculation, as the head does not fall straight down from 1100 mm but rather swings slightly. The deceleration upon impact is effectively zero if the head does not move post-impact on a hard surface. Additionally, the difference in momentum between the skull and the brain must be considered due to varying densities and the cushioning effect of cerebrospinal fluid. Accurate calculations require detailed physics principles, particularly regarding the forces at play during such an impact.
Steve Smith
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hi,

Hopefully somewone will know the calculation to find out the impact force for one person sitting on a chair and falling backwards with a full deaceleraton to a hard floor, what would the impact force be to the base of he head when stricking the floor.

Chair is a chair with a bottom and a back rest section
From floor to bottom of chair 360 mm
Whilst in the sitting position head from floor 1100 mm
Weight of person on the chair 100 kg

The chair flips backwards and the person goes backwards sitting on the chair and head strikes the floor, what would the impact force to the persons back of the head be ?

Regards,
Steve Smith
 
Physics news on Phys.org
This is very hard to calculate, you can get the speed they hit the floor with fairly easily.
But the force will depend on how their head slows down as it hits (f=ma where 'a' is the deceleration)
It's even more complicated for a head, the skull will slow at a certain rate but the brain will slow down at a different rate as different structures absorb energy in different ways.
 
Hi,

I agree with your statement to mesure the aceleration one problem I believe in the calculation is that the movement of the fall is dot directly downward but a slight pendulum affect as tha chair tilts over the head is not making a direct fall from 1100 mm but swinging at a pendulum that is why i mention the chairs dimensions.

The deacelaretion would be 0 mm hitting a concreted or tiled floor as no movement could still occur after the impact.

Yes the brain momentum and force would be diffrent due to t own density / mass / weight and the liquid between the brain and scull.

Just wanting the calculation based on the imact force to the floor but not as a 100% downward fall but a pendulum fall due to the chair dimensions.

Many thanks for your reply.

Regards
Steve Smith
 
The rope is tied into the person (the load of 200 pounds) and the rope goes up from the person to a fixed pulley and back down to his hands. He hauls the rope to suspend himself in the air. What is the mechanical advantage of the system? The person will indeed only have to lift half of his body weight (roughly 100 pounds) because he now lessened the load by that same amount. This APPEARS to be a 2:1 because he can hold himself with half the force, but my question is: is that mechanical...
Some physics textbook writer told me that Newton's first law applies only on bodies that feel no interactions at all. He said that if a body is on rest or moves in constant velocity, there is no external force acting on it. But I have heard another form of the law that says the net force acting on a body must be zero. This means there is interactions involved after all. So which one is correct?
Thread 'Beam on an inclined plane'
Hello! I have a question regarding a beam on an inclined plane. I was considering a beam resting on two supports attached to an inclined plane. I was almost sure that the lower support must be more loaded. My imagination about this problem is shown in the picture below. Here is how I wrote the condition of equilibrium forces: $$ \begin{cases} F_{g\parallel}=F_{t1}+F_{t2}, \\ F_{g\perp}=F_{r1}+F_{r2} \end{cases}. $$ On the other hand...
Back
Top