Biomechanics Pt. 3 (9/5d) Flashcards
For every force, there is an ___ and ___ force
equal and opposite
Vector Composition
Adding forces
Vector L + Vector M = Vector R (resultant vector)
Direction of forces are important, pay attention to +/-
Vector Reduction
Subtracting forces
A single resultant vector can be “resolved” into separate component vectors
Force F can be broken into its two components: FH & FY
Static rotary equilibrium
Internal torque = external torque
The net torque is equal to zero → the joint is not moving
3 Types of Musculoskeletal Levers
First class (very few) Second class (almost none) Third class (most common)
Why do muscles have small moment arms?
so they can move external forces over large distances quickly (force-distance tradeoff)
Force-Distance Tradeoff
big force=large distance
small force =short distance
Newton’s 1st Law
Law of Inertia - amount of force required to alter the velocity of a body
Static equilibrium
linear or rotational velocity is 0
Dynamic equilibrium
linear or rotational velocity is constant
Mass of a body
describes its inherent resistance to a change in linear velocity
Mass moment of inertia
describes the body’s inherent resistance to a change in angular velocity
indicated by I, expressed in units of kilograms per meter squared (kg∙m2)
Depends on the 1) amount of mass of a body and 2) distribution of mass of a body
Newton’s 2nd Law
Law of Acceleration - force equals mass times acceleration
Refer to notes for Linear Force and Rotary Torque Acceleration relationships
Newton’s 3rd Law
Law of Reaction - anytime a force is exerted on an object, the object exerts an equal but opposite force on the object
EX: Joint reaction forces, Ground reaction forces
Joint reaction forces
force that is created in response to a muscle pulling one bone against the other during activation
The joint reaction force is always opposite the muscle force
Can compress or pull apart