140 likes | 349 Views
Biomechanics. May 5, 2005 Dr. Kelsey Jordahl. Bacterium ~0.3 m. Whale ~30 m. Size. Factor of 10 8 in size Factor of 10 24 in mass!. Scaling Surface Area to Volume ratio. V l 3 Volume to length m l 3 mass to length S l 2 Surface to volume
E N D
Biomechanics May 5, 2005 Dr. Kelsey Jordahl
Bacterium ~0.3m Whale ~30 m Size Factor of 108 in size Factor of 1024 in mass!
Scaling Surface Area to Volume ratio V l3 Volume to length m l3 mass to length S l2 Surface to volume so S/V l m1/3
Consequences of falling for organisms of difference sizes >100 kg: serious injury possible even at one’s own height (cows, horses, elephants, very large humans) 100 g – 100 kg: may be injured if fall from greater than own height (dogs, cats, squirrels, most humans) 100 mg – 100 g: no injury from any height (mice, insects, baby birds) <100 mg: never really fall at all; airborne (pollen, spores, very small animals)
“You can drop a mouse down a 1000 yard mine shaft and, arriving at the bottom, it gets a slight shock and walks away. A rat is killed, a man is broken, and a horse splashes.”
Shew ~6 g Elephant ~6000 kg Land Mammals Factor of 106 in mass (only 100 in size)
Scaling factors for mammals y la l=m1/3
Example of allometry: bone proportions in pelycosaurs
Example of allometry: shape change in human ontogeny
Dimensionless numbers Mechanical advantage MA=Fo/Fi Flatness index FI=S1.5/V Strain x/x0 Froude number Fr=v2/gl Walking on water /l2g
Final ExamThursday, May 14(same time & location) Chapters 22, 25, & 29 (sections 26.7, 26.8, & 26.9 also helpful) S. Vogel, Life’s Devices, chapters 3 & 4, on reserve in library Handout from today