Punch in the Face: Maximize Effectiveness

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Maximizing the effectiveness of a punch involves minimizing contact time during the strike. A punch that maintains contact is less effective due to the conservation of momentum, as the force applied is inversely related to the duration of contact. The ideal scenario is to strike quickly and retract, allowing for greater force transfer with minimal time involved. The collision is described as highly inelastic, meaning the hand does not bounce back significantly, which reduces the energy directed towards the target. For maximum impact, a smaller contact area is recommended, and the speed of retraction is more about preparing for subsequent strikes than increasing the initial punch's effectiveness.
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When you punch someone in the face and leave your hand there, it'll be less effective than doing a strike where contact time is kept minimal: hit and back.
The reason is the conservation of linear momentum and impulse.
In the first case:
(As the force-average is the change in the momentum of system(hand+face) divided by
Δt)
F=(Pfinal - Pinitial)/Δt=(0-Pinitial)/Δt=-Pinitial/Δt

[P hereby refers to the initial and final momentum of hand and therefore minus sign becomes + when subtraction is carried out as the direction of the speed changes]

In the second case:
F=(Pfinal - Pinitial)/Δt
so anything added to the Pfinal will increase the Force applied to face by also keeping the time minimal.

Am I correct?
 
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No, the momentum transfer is done within a short interval \delta t (the shorter, the better), but p_{final} is always zero in the frame attached to the object being hit.

So the more devastating the blow, the less \delta t have to be, and of course the greater the incoming object's speed.
 
Try thinking of it qualitatively this way:

The hand-to-face collision is highly inelastic - in other words, your hand does not really "bounce off" very much when you punch someone.

Therefore, in order to pull your arm back, you are using that muscle energy to do work on your arm to pull it backward, rather than doing work on the guy's face.
 
to sum up, if you want devastating effect, make sure contact area is small. taking it to extreme, just use the knife.
 
The devastating effect does not depend on how fast you pull back your punch. In martial art, you pull back your punch fast because then you can give the opponent another punch.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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