BIO Forces on a dancer’s body. Dancers experience large forces associated with the jumps they make. For example, when a dancer lands after a vertical jump, the force exerted on the head by the neck must exceed the head’s weight by enough to cause the head to slow down and come to rest. The head is about 9.4% of a typical person’s mass. Video analysis of a 65 kg dancer landing after a vertical jump shows that her head slows down from 4.0 m/s to rest in a time of 0.20 s. 50. What is the magnitude of the average force that her neck exerts on her head during the landing? A. 0 N B. 60 N C. 120 N D. 180 N 53. The forces on a dancer can be measured directly when a dancer performs a jump on a force plate that measures the force between her feet and the ground. Figure 4.41 is a graph of force versus time throughout a vertical jump performed on a force plate. What is happening at 0.4 s? The dancer is Figure 4.41 Problem 53. A. bending her legs so that her body is accelerating downward. B. pushing her body up with her legs and is almost ready to leave the ground. C. in the air and at the top of her jump. D. landing and her feet have just touched the ground.
BIO Forces on a dancer’s body. Dancers experience large forces associated with the jumps they make. For example, when a dancer lands after a vertical jump, the force exerted on the head by the neck must exceed the head’s weight by enough to cause the head to slow down and come to rest. The head is about 9.4% of a typical person’s mass. Video analysis of a 65 kg dancer landing after a vertical jump shows that her head slows down from 4.0 m/s to rest in a time of 0.20 s. 50. What is the magnitude of the average force that her neck exerts on her head during the landing? A. 0 N B. 60 N C. 120 N D. 180 N 53. The forces on a dancer can be measured directly when a dancer performs a jump on a force plate that measures the force between her feet and the ground. Figure 4.41 is a graph of force versus time throughout a vertical jump performed on a force plate. What is happening at 0.4 s? The dancer is Figure 4.41 Problem 53. A. bending her legs so that her body is accelerating downward. B. pushing her body up with her legs and is almost ready to leave the ground. C. in the air and at the top of her jump. D. landing and her feet have just touched the ground.
BIO Forces on a dancer’s body. Dancers experience large forces associated with the jumps they make. For example, when a dancer lands after a vertical jump, the force exerted on the head by the neck must exceed the head’s weight by enough to cause the head to slow down and come to rest. The head is about 9.4% of a typical person’s mass. Video analysis of a 65 kg dancer landing after a vertical jump shows that her head slows down from 4.0 m/s to rest in a time of 0.20 s.
50. What is the magnitude of the average force that her neck exerts on her head during the landing?
A. 0 N
B. 60 N
C. 120 N
D. 180 N
53. The forces on a dancer can be measured directly when a dancer performs a jump on a force plate that measures the force between her feet and the ground. Figure 4.41 is a graph of force versus time throughout a vertical jump performed on a force plate. What is happening at 0.4 s? The dancer is
Figure 4.41
Problem 53.
A. bending her legs so that her body is accelerating downward.
B. pushing her body up with her legs and is almost ready to leave the ground.
C. in the air and at the top of her jump.
D. landing and her feet have just touched the ground.
Need help on the following questions on biomechanics. (Please refer to images below)A gymnast weighing 68 kg attempts a handstand using only one arm. He plants his handat an angle resulting in the reaction force shown.A) Find the resultant force (acting on the Center of Mass)B) Find the resultant moment (acting on the Center of Mass)C) Draw the resultant force and moment about the center of mass on the figure below. Will the gymnast rotate, translate, or both? And in which direction?
Please help me on the following question (Please refer to image below)An Olympic lifter (m = 103kg) is holding a lift with a mass of 350 kg. The barexerts a purely vertical force that is equally distributed between both hands. Each arm has amass of 9 kg, are 0.8m long and form a 40° angle with the horizontal. The CoM for each armis 0.5 m from hand. Assuming the lifter is facing us in the diagram below, his right deltoidinserts 14cm from the shoulder at an angle of 13° counter-clockwise from the humerus.A) You are interested in calculating the force in the right deltoid. Draw a free body diagramof the right arm including the external forces, joint reaction forces, a coordinate system andstate your assumptions.B) Find the force exerted by the right deltoidC) Find the shoulder joint contact force. Report your answer using the magnitude and directionof the shoulder force vector.
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