Respuesta :
The new cross sectional area and tensile stress is mathematically given as
A=4.8*10^{-4}m^2
X=14:100
Cross sectional area and stress on the femur
Question Parameters:
To see why this must be so, recall, that the stress on the femur for a man standing on one leg is 1.4%
we scale this man up by a factor of 10 in all dimensions
that a 70 kg person has a femur with a cross-section area
a)
Generally the New cross sectional area is mathematically given as
100A=100*4.8*10^{-4}
A=4.8*10^{-4}m^2
b)
From the initial statement we see that the fraction of the tensile strength is the stress on the femur and will be
[tex]X=\frac{14}{100}[/tex]
X=14$
X=14:100
For more information on fraction
https://brainly.com/question/1301963
Complete Question
Larger animals have sturdier bones than smaller animals. A mouse's skeleton is only a few percent of its body weight, compared to 16% for an elephant. To see why this must be so, recall, that the stress on the femur for a man standing on one leg is 1.4% of the bone's tensile strength. Suppose we scale this man up by a factor of 10 in all dimensions, keeping the same body proportions. (Assume that a 70 kg person has a femur with a cross-section area (of the cortical bone) of 4.8 x 10-4m², a typical value.)
Part A
Both the inside and outside diameter of the femur, the region of cortical bone, will increase by a factor of 10. What will be the new cross-section area? Express your answer using two significant figures.
Part B
If the scaled-up man now stands on one leg, what fraction of the tensile strength is the stress on the femur?