Warning

 

Close
Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Cancel Confirm
AR15.COM
1/23/2010 8:47:45 AM EDT
Humans Could Run 40 MPH ... in Theory

LiveScience


Humans could perhaps run as fast 40 mph, a new study suggests. Such a feat would leave in the dust the world's fastest runner, Usain Bolt, who has clocked nearly 28 mph in the 100-meter sprint.

The new findings come after researchers took a new look at the factors that limit human speed. Their conclusions? The top speed humans could reach may come down to how quickly muscles in the body can move.

Previous studies have suggested the main hindrance to speed is that our limbs can only take a certain amount of force when they strike the ground. This may not be the whole story, however.

"If one considers that elite sprinters can apply peak forces of 800 to 1,000 pounds with a single limb during each sprinting step, it's easy to believe that runners are probably operating at or near the force limits of their muscles and limbs," said Peter Weyand of Southern Methodist University, one of the study's authors.  

But Weyand and colleagues found in treadmill tests that our limbs can handle a lot more force than what is applied during top-speed running.

What really holds us back

Their results showed the critical biological limit is imposed by time — specifically, the very brief periods of time available to apply force to the ground while sprinting. In elite sprinters, foot-ground contact times are less than one-tenth of a second, and peak ground forces occur within less than one-twentieth of that second for the first instant of foot-ground contact.

To figure out what limits how fast we can run, the researchers used a high-speed treadmill equipped to precisely measure the forces applied to its surface with each footfall. Study participants then ran on the treadmill using different gaits, including hopping, and running forward and backwards as fast as they possibly could.

The ground forces applied while hopping on one leg at top speed exceeded those applied during top-speed forward running by 30 percent or more. That suggests our limbs can handle greater forces than those found for two-legged running at top speeds.

And although top backward speed was substantially slower than top forward speed, as expected, the minimum periods of foot-ground contact at top backward and forward speeds were essentially identical. The fact that these two drastically different running styles had such similar intervals for foot-ground contact suggest that there is a physical limit to how fast your muscle fibers can work to get your feet off the ground, the researchers say.

New speed limit

The new work shows that running speed limits are set by the contractile speed limits of the muscle fibers themselves, with fiber contractile speeds setting the limit on how quickly the runner's limb can apply force to the running surface.

"Our simple projections indicate that muscle contractile speeds that would allow for maximal or near-maximal forces would permit running speeds of 35 to 40 miles per hour and conceivably faster," Bundle said.

While 40 mph may not impress the cheetah, the world's fastest land animal reaching speeds of 70 mph (112 kph), it's enough to escape a grizzly bear and much quicker than T. rex, which may have reached 18 mph (29 kph) during a good jog.

The results were published in the Jan. issue of the Journal of Applied Physiology.

Copyright © 2010 LiveScience.com. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
1/23/2010 8:50:53 AM EDT
[#1]
That's interesting, but obviously a HUGE waste of money.
1/23/2010 8:53:57 AM EDT
[#2]
50MPH Man...trumps 40MPH man...
1/23/2010 8:56:25 AM EDT
[#3]
Quoted:
That's interesting, but obviously a HUGE waste of money.


Not really. I'm sure the research on the rate of contraction will have some practical resource.
1/23/2010 8:58:24 AM EDT
[#4]



Quoted:



Quoted:

That's interesting, but obviously a HUGE waste of money.




Not really. I'm sure the research on the rate of contraction will have some practical resource.


I disagree, there are too many useless studies that exist only to employ people.

 
1/23/2010 9:00:37 AM EDT
[#5]
The top speed humans could reach may come down to how quickly muscles in the body can move.



Really?  You don't say!  
1/23/2010 9:01:26 AM EDT
[#6]
Any study that improves our knowledge/understanding of the human body, physics, space, and just science in general is good and can be used to help mankind in one way or another. Knowledge is power.
1/23/2010 9:02:04 AM EDT
[#7]
Quoted:
The top speed humans could reach may come down to how quickly muscles in the body can move.



Really?  You don't say!  


My thought exactly: "Duh?"
1/23/2010 9:05:31 AM EDT
[#8]
Quoted:
Quoted:
The top speed humans could reach may come down to how quickly muscles in the body can move.



Really?  You don't say!  


My thought exactly: "Duh?"


I could be a multi million dollar a year pro football sensation if only I could run, kick and pass.
1/23/2010 9:07:44 AM EDT
[#9]
Nice way to remind us how lame we are in the physical department.  That's why we walk upright, can build weapons and have risen to the top of the food chain.
1/23/2010 9:17:06 AM EDT
[#10]

"I could be a multi million dollar a year pro football sensation if only I could run, kick and pass."

No.  You could have been a pro by taking up ballet and learning to stretch the kicking leg - and make the million dollars a year.
1/23/2010 9:19:43 AM EDT
[#11]

That research does nothing toward enabling a 40MPH possibility, it only tries to exaggerate human capability by fluffing a high-school grade experiment. And, hell, since those are only observations made by measuring forces and speeds it is more like a physics experiment than it is a physiological study of muscles.




Essentially: bad scientific context, simple empirical data, and a hypothesis that doesn't seem original.
1/23/2010 9:53:15 AM EDT
[#12]
i refuse to accept that the top speed that a human can run comes down to how quickly muscles in the body can move.  have you ever heard of anything so ridiculous?
1/23/2010 6:57:27 PM EDT
[#13]
Quoted:
Humans Could Run 40 MPH ... in Theory

LiveScience


Humans could perhaps run as fast 40 mph, a new study suggests. Such a feat would leave in the dust the world's fastest runner, Usain Bolt, who has clocked nearly 28 mph in the 100-meter sprint.

The new findings come after researchers took a new look at the factors that limit human speed. Their conclusions? The top speed humans could reach may come down to how quickly muscles in the body can move.
Previous studies have suggested the main hindrance to speed is that our limbs can only take a certain amount of force when they strike the ground. This may not be the whole story, however.

"If one considers that elite sprinters can apply peak forces of 800 to 1,000 pounds with a single limb during each sprinting step, it's easy to believe that runners are probably operating at or near the force limits of their muscles and limbs," said Peter Weyand of Southern Methodist University, one of the study's authors.  

But Weyand and colleagues found in treadmill tests that our limbs can handle a lot more force than what is applied during top-speed running.

What really holds us back

Their results showed the critical biological limit is imposed by time — specifically, the very brief periods of time available to apply force to the ground while sprinting. In elite sprinters, foot-ground contact times are less than one-tenth of a second, and peak ground forces occur within less than one-twentieth of that second for the first instant of foot-ground contact.

To figure out what limits how fast we can run, the researchers used a high-speed treadmill equipped to precisely measure the forces applied to its surface with each footfall. Study participants then ran on the treadmill using different gaits, including hopping, and running forward and backwards as fast as they possibly could.

The ground forces applied while hopping on one leg at top speed exceeded those applied during top-speed forward running by 30 percent or more. That suggests our limbs can handle greater forces than those found for two-legged running at top speeds.

And although top backward speed was substantially slower than top forward speed, as expected, the minimum periods of foot-ground contact at top backward and forward speeds were essentially identical. The fact that these two drastically different running styles had such similar intervals for foot-ground contact suggest that there is a physical limit to how fast your muscle fibers can work to get your feet off the ground, the researchers say.

New speed limit

The new work shows that running speed limits are set by the contractile speed limits of the muscle fibers themselves, with fiber contractile speeds setting the limit on how quickly the runner's limb can apply force to the running surface.

"Our simple projections indicate that muscle contractile speeds that would allow for maximal or near-maximal forces would permit running speeds of 35 to 40 miles per hour and conceivably faster," Bundle said.

While 40 mph may not impress the cheetah, the world's fastest land animal reaching speeds of 70 mph (112 kph), it's enough to escape a grizzly bear and much quicker than T. rex, which may have reached 18 mph (29 kph) during a good jog.

The results were published in the Jan. issue of the Journal of Applied Physiology.

Copyright © 2010 LiveScience.com. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


WOW ! NO SHIT I didn't need to do a study to know this info.
1/23/2010 7:01:00 PM EDT
[#14]
Yeah, I already knew this. Maybe I should have published my findings when I was 12
1/23/2010 7:03:50 PM EDT
[#15]
That's a lot like saying, "This car tops out at 90 mph, unless we can get it to go 100 mph."
1/23/2010 7:03:58 PM EDT
[#16]



Quoted:


That's interesting, but obviously a HUGE waste of money.


Are you kidding??  Finding out how to outrun a T-Rex is of the HIGHEST importance.