1 / 13

Physics of Figure Skating

Brandon Ng 3o3(03). Physics of Figure Skating . Introduction . Also known as Artistic Skating Olympic sport Perform spins,jumps and intricate footwork on ice Watch an example of figure skating here . 2010 Winter Olympics Champion : Kim Yuna. Disciplines . Singles Pair skating

oriel
Télécharger la présentation

Physics of Figure Skating

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Brandon Ng 3o3(03) Physics of Figure Skating

  2. Introduction • Also known as Artistic Skating • Olympic sport • Perform spins,jumps and intricate footwork on ice Watch an example of figure skating here 2010 Winter Olympics Champion : Kim Yuna

  3. Disciplines • Singles • Pair skating • Ice dancing • Synchronized skating • Adagio skating • A form of pair skating • Acrobatic skating • Combination of circus arts, artistic gymnastics skills • Special figures • Elaborate original designs on ice

  4. Skates • Made of many layers of leather • Very stiff to provide ankle support • Toe picks on the front of blade • Used for certain jumps • Blades are sharp to reduce friction, increasing speed • Newton’s law of inertia

  5. Science • Ice is not slippery • When skating, one is skating on water in its liquid form • Ice melts when pressure is applied to it • The greater the pressure on a substance, the lower its freezing point

  6. Science • A person’s weight is unable to melt ice under them • However, the sharp skate blade of the ice skates puts the weight of the skater on a small area • Allows skater to glide on a layer of water between the blade and the ice

  7. Wonders • Travelling at speeds around 20mph • Completing four revolutions in the air • Land on one leg • Unable to defy gravity or laws of physics • Most people can barely jump high enough to make one revolution without touching the ground

  8. Concepts • Torque • Force that leads to rotation • Linear motion • Motion along a straight line • Angular momentum • A conserved vector quantity that can be used to describe the overall state of a physical system • Vorticity • A concept describing horizontal rotation In the atmosphere

  9. Vorticity • Skate moves without falling down • Angular momentum helps stabilize the moving body, just like someone riding a bicycle • Skaters spread their arms then bring their hands closer to their bodies • Causing a large moment of inertia • Speed of spinning increases

  10. Torque • Spinning is also dependent on torque • Force must be applied some distance from the axis of rotation • ie. If I push a stationary person’s arms, he can spin, but if I push the middle of his body, he will barely move • Force is achieved by pushing the ice • Newton’s law of action-reaction forces • Multiple spins are accomplished with the result from the torque created by turning of one’s skates as one pushes off the ice

  11. Torque • The larger or further the force is from the axis of rotation, the larger the torque • The larger the torque, the greater the angular momentum, the more spins made Some skaters can reach rotation speeds of 7 revolutions during a jump, 420 revolutions per minute!

  12. Speed and Landing • Rotational speed increased by pulling in their hands closer to body • Reduces air resistance • Streches out their hands and legs for stability while landing Skaters can produce extreme angular momentum at take-off, that they might not be physically strong enough to counteract the G-forces experienced during the rotation. The G-force felt by the arms during a jump or spin may exceed 4Gs!

  13. References • http://goldsea.com/810/27sp-kim.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure_skating#Disciplines • http://www.livescience.com/culture/phsyics-of-figure-skating-100216.html • http://weblogs.cltv.com/features/health/livinghealthy/2010/01/skate-your-way-to-health-rockf.html • http://www.stuffintheair.com/the-physics-of-ice-skating.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angular_momentum#Definition • http://btc.montana.edu/olympics/physbio/biomechanics/cam02.html • http://btc.montana.edu/olympics/physbio/biomechanics/cam03.html • http://www.helium.com/items/197024-the-science-behind-ice-skating • http://www.fouldsy.com/2007/04/

More Related