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The start in speed skatingfrom running to gliding

 

作者: JOS DE KONING,   RIXTE THOMAS,   MONIQUE BERGER,   GERT GROOT,   GERRIT VAN INGEN SCHENAU,  

 

期刊: Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise  (OVID Available online 1995)
卷期: Volume 27, issue 12  

页码: 1703-1708

 

ISSN:0195-9131

 

年代: 1995

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: BIOMECHANICS;THREE-DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS;TECHNIQUE;LOCOMOTION

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

DE KONING, J. J., R. THOMAS, M. BERGER, G. DE GROOT, and G. J. VAN INGEN SCHENAU. The start in speed skating: from running to gliding.Med. Sci. Sports Exerc., Vol. 27, No. 12, pp. 1703–1708, 1995. The purpose of this study was to describe the push-off kinematics in speed skating using three-dimensional coordinates of elite male sprinters during the first part of a speed skating sprint. The velocity of the mass center of the skater's body vC, is decomposed into an “extension” velocity component vC, which is associated with the shortening and lengthening of the leg segment and a “rotational” velocity component vr, which is the result of the rotation of the leg segment about the toe of the skate. It can be concluded that the mechanics of the first strokes of a sprint differ considerably from the mechanics of strokes later on. The first push-offs take place against a fixed location on the ice. In these “running-like” push-offs the contribution of vrin the forward direction is larger than the extension component ve. Later on, the strokes are characterized by a gliding push-off in which vcincreases. In these gliding push-offs no direct relation exists between forward velocity of the skater and the extension in the joints. This allows skaters to obtain much higher velocities than can be obtained during running.

 

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