How to calculate the demand of energy necessary to hold an object?

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In summary: However, the article does provide some estimations. For example, the muscle may have a spring constant of 100 N/m. If you have 10 fibers in the muscle, the total spring constant would be 1,000 N/m. In summary, the muscles in our arms require energy to contract and maintain tension. This energy is expended through chemical reactions within the muscle cells. There is no one definitive answer to calculating the power necessary to exert a force. However, by understanding the muscle and its spring characteristics, one can make an estimate of the power necessary to apply a force.
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Homework Statement
How to calc the demand of energy necessary to hold an object in certain space of time?
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I was just think how we could calc the power that we need to do {obviously, in general/average, since varies from person to person} to hold an object
But we know the force we need to apply is equal mg.
I am pretty sure that this question is very comprehensive and because of this it becomes difficult to answer, we would need to know something about the muscles of our arm.
I could imagine the muscles contraying like a spring oscillating, do you know any articles that say about it?
 
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You are correct to link it to muscle contractions. When you hold something in front of you in a stationary position, your muscles undergo isometric contractions. This is the energy-requiring process that results in you being able to maintain tension and exert the contact force on the object (so whilst this contact force from your hand does no work on the object, you still expend energy within your muscles as the muscle cells continually contract and relax).

That is as much as I know. I am not sure how you could go about calculating a numeric value, but I will think about it. I found https://journals.physiology.org/doi/pdf/10.1152/jappl.1976.41.2.136, which might be a starting place.
 
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In fact, Feynman touched upon this in his lectures,
It is a fact that when one holds a weight he has to do “physiological” work. Why should he sweat? Why should he need to consume food to hold the weight up? Why is the machinery inside him operating at full throttle, just to hold the weight up? Actually, the weight could be held up with no effort by just placing it on a table; then the table, quietly and calmly, without any supply of energy, is able to maintain the same weight at the same height!

The physiological situation is something like the following. There are two kinds of muscles in the human body and in other animals: one kind, called striated or skeletal muscle, is the type of muscle we have in our arms, for example, which is under voluntary control; the other kind, called smooth muscle, is like the muscle in the intestines or, in the clam, the greater adductor muscle that closes the shell. The smooth muscles work very slowly, but they can hold a “set”; that is to say, if the clam tries to close its shell in a certain position, it will hold that position, even if there is a very great force trying to change it. It will hold a position under load for hours and hours without getting tired because it is very much like a table holding up a weight, it “sets” into a certain position, and the molecules just lock there temporarily with no work being done, no effort being generated by the clam.

The fact that we have to generate effort to hold up a weight is simply due to the design of striated muscle. What happens is that when a nerve impulse reaches a muscle fiber, the fiber gives a little twitch and then relaxes, so that when we hold something up, enormous volleys of nerve impulses are coming into the muscle, large numbers of twitches are maintaining the weight, while the other fibers relax. We can see this, of course: when we hold a heavy weight and get tired, we begin to shake. The reason is that the volleys are coming irregularly, and the muscle is tired and not reacting fast enough.

Why such an inefficient scheme? We do not know exactly why, but evolution has not been able to develop fast smooth muscle. Smooth muscle would be much more effective for holding up weights because you could just stand there and it would lock in; there would be no work involved and no energy would be required. However, it has the disadvantage that it is very slow-operating.


Feynman Vol. I, Chap. 14

Perhaps you could think of each individual fiber as a spring, and determine some effective spring constant. Then find the work needed to contract the fiber to maximum contraction in a single cycle (assume this is dissipated as heat when the fiber relaxes). Then you can multiply up by the number of contractions per second and the number of fibers in the muscle to get an estimate for the chemical energy required per second.

The key part would be how to determine that effective spring constant. That I am not sure.
 
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Related to How to calculate the demand of energy necessary to hold an object?

1. What is the formula for calculating the demand of energy necessary to hold an object?

The formula for calculating the demand of energy necessary to hold an object is: E = mgh, where E is the energy in joules, m is the mass of the object in kilograms, g is the acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s^2), and h is the height of the object in meters.

2. How does the mass of an object affect the demand of energy necessary to hold it?

The greater the mass of an object, the more energy is required to hold it. This is because the formula for calculating energy (E = mgh) includes the mass of the object as a variable. Therefore, the greater the mass, the greater the demand for energy.

3. Does the height of an object affect the demand of energy necessary to hold it?

Yes, the height of an object does affect the demand of energy necessary to hold it. This is because the formula for calculating energy (E = mgh) includes the height of the object as a variable. Therefore, the higher the object is lifted, the greater the demand for energy.

4. How does the acceleration due to gravity affect the demand of energy necessary to hold an object?

The acceleration due to gravity (g) is a constant value of 9.8 m/s^2. This means that it does not directly affect the demand of energy necessary to hold an object. However, it is a necessary variable in the formula for calculating energy (E = mgh) and therefore, indirectly affects the demand for energy.

5. Is there a specific unit for measuring the demand of energy necessary to hold an object?

Yes, the unit for measuring the demand of energy necessary to hold an object is joules (J). This is the standard unit for energy in the International System of Units (SI).

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