vault3rb0y wrote:I read somewhere a while back that bubka was the only athlete at a certain competition
This study was from Seol Olympics by Germans and Egorov was the only other vaulter to increase the energy in the second phase.
vault3rb0y wrote:I read somewhere a while back that bubka was the only athlete at a certain competition
When you swing with any velocity around your top hand, it creates centripital acceleration (Ac=V^2/R). Then your body weight X that acceleration= the force (F=MA), or extra tension, added onto your top hand and down on the pole. Obviously the farther your body weight (hypothetically keep in mind) from your top hand, the more force you will create. Now the only way to properly add the energy is to set up to add this energy before the pole hits the back of the box. Any trail leg movement backwards AFTER the pole has hit the back of the box is actually releasing tension on the pole, and is then cancelled out again as you swing through. At that point i believe, like you said, you have entered the vaulter-pole system and you cannot add energy because of newtons laws. But what if you put energy into the ground at take off, and set up your swing, BEFORE you enter the vaulter-pole system (free take-off/ pre-jump)? I believe you can add the potential energy you have created off the ground by hitting an inverted C, into the pole with a strong swing.
Imagine you are on a thick bungee cord that will react up and down according to your swing. You swing your trail leg back, and the tension of the bungee is released. This is what happens when a vaulter brings his trail leg back AFTER he/she already enters the vaulter-pole system. The bungee actually contracts a little as you lift your trail leg behind you. Then you swing through, and do a bubka. The bungee expands again as you have added tension to it again. Its the same thing on the vault. Unless you are already in an "inverted C" and prepared to swing before the pole hits the back, you will have a hard time increasing the tension of your swing. Now imagine you are standing on the ground and jump into the air, putting your body into an inverted C, THEN grab the bungee and swing. The bungee is not having to absorb the energy of getting into your inverted C, because you did that before you were in the system.
volteur wrote:I'm wondering does gravity add to the kinetic energy the vaulter has as they descend from the apex of the takeoff?
Volteur
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