AustinL911
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- May 24, 2016
- Messages
- 291
As I'm sitting here working on my pre-course modules for TNCC (Trauma Nurse Core Curriculum [I'm an ICU nurse at a Level-1 trauma center]), I've happened upon this physics formula again. I've never really thought much about it until now, but it made me think of archery. In dealing with traumatically injured patients, we tend to think about energy transfer a bit and how it relates to their injuries.
The basic premise is this: if you doubt the mass of the object that hit the patient/animal (car/arrow), the KE is doubled. However, if you double the velocity of the object that hits the patient/animal (car/arrow), KE is quadrupled.
If that's the case, why do so many, including myself, choose mass > velocity when selecting an arrow? Inertia? Momentum?
It seems to me that velocity (pending the arrow stays intact) buys you more for your money.
Thoughts?
The basic premise is this: if you doubt the mass of the object that hit the patient/animal (car/arrow), the KE is doubled. However, if you double the velocity of the object that hits the patient/animal (car/arrow), KE is quadrupled.
If that's the case, why do so many, including myself, choose mass > velocity when selecting an arrow? Inertia? Momentum?
It seems to me that velocity (pending the arrow stays intact) buys you more for your money.
Thoughts?