Hmmmmmmmm
OK. Substitute in "....the impact of which exerted forces upon his body which resulted in propelling him....."
Is that better?
And a fall is not always only due to gravity.
Someone running for a bus who trips and falls still has significant forward velocity that might make all the difference if that person (say) hit a bollard head on in the fall. Some falls have significant horizontal momentum components. They pretty much all involve a vertical downward component as well, which is usually the result of acceleration due to gravity, but they don't by any means have to be exclusively gravity-induced.
I thought they said he was an expert skier?
Yeah, they did:
So? Is someone who's an expert at something not allowed to do it for recreation in your world?
You're a little late to the party and a whole lot off the target of the point, Damien. That point being: The speed wasn't all that high for an "expert" skier although someone thought it very high for a recreational skier.
They're now saying that his helmet was cracked open, and they estimate that he was doing something around 50mph at the time of the accident (which is extremely fast for recreational skiing).
I think you are the one failing to following the line of thought. The claim was that he was going very fast for a "recreational" skier. My point was that he was an "expert" skier so it wasn't particularly fast at all.
50mph is fast for recreational ski-ing, whether or not you're an expert.
But now it sounds like he wasn't going very fast at all so the whole argument is moot.
The part you highlighted was "recreational skiiing", not a "recreational skiier", so you have moved the slalom gates.
And here's Australia's ABC News reporting on the same news with possibly a better translation:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-01-...ed-schumacher-skiing-at-27leisurely27/5185222
"According to the witness, who contacted the German magazine on Friday, Schumacher was descending the slope at a "leisurely" pace - "a maximum speed of 20 kilometres an hour"."
Conflicting statements have emerged, notably about how fast Schumacher was going when he crashed. Albertville prosecutors and the ski resort say Schumacher was skiing at great speed. Kehm has challenged that, saying he could not have been going fast 'because it appears he helped a friend who had just fallen'.
Investigators are tasked with determining responsibility in the accident, with high stakes possibly involved regarding any insurance compensation.
It is believed he lost control after hitting a boulder which had been concealed by snow that had fallen the night before and was 'catapulted' headfirst into three other rocks.
Schumacher is understood to have been travelling off-piste at speed when he crashed, hitting his head on a boulder with such force that his helmet cracked in two
It is believed that his life was saved by his skiing helmet, which split on impact.
I will agree that the impact speed of his head was probably pretty close to 50.I think the helmet is a pretty good indicator of the impact force. Helmets are certified and must meet impact standards so they will have a pretty good idea of what the minimum force exerted was and then work back from there.
I am thinking that the helmet being split in half is a pretty good indicator that the rate of speed was close to the 50 mph claim than the 20 km/h claim.
I will agree that the impact speed of his head was probably pretty close to 50.
That, however, is not a reliable indicator of how fast he was actually skiing.
Well, I don't think a helmet would split at 50 mph, they are pretty tough. I think the actual speed of his head will be higher. I think once they work backwards from the force of impact that could split the helmet, they are going to find he had to have been travelling more that 20 km/h.
(Throwing a ski/snowboard helmet against a concrete floor as hard as you can will replicate the 50 mph speed and the helmet won't have the support of the head to protect it from splitting. I doubt the helmet will break.)
e.t.a. reading your post again, I think you may have the effect of a head backwards. It's really easy to throw an empty helmet around and not damage it. But what would happen if you put, say, a pumpkin inside it? I'm guessing it would split more easily, not less.
But, even so, no one in their right mind would get back into a race car after such an episode. The brain can only take so much.
As one of the few (if not only) people on this forum formally trained and board-certified in neurocritical care, I can tell you that the speed of the accident is irrelevant and non-prognostic. People have fallen from standing height, struck their head, and have had catastrophic traumatic brain injury (TBI) as a result. I know. I've taken care of such patients.
So, it doesn't matter if it was a direct blow, the helmet didn't function properly, whatever. Even deceleration injury in a perfectly intact helmet with all the factors being the same can cause such TBI.
What matters now primarily is the extent of ongoing swelling in his brain, what actual areas of the brain were damaged, and what the so-called "secondary injury" will be as a result of subsequent latent factors such as inflammation, gliosis, and ischemia.
Treatment of TBI is based on the Monroe-Kellie doctrine. Namely, that the head is an enclosed space and that, once damaged, has limited ability to swell. What they will look at is his intracerebral pressure, which is monitored by an internally placed sensor. There are various maneuvers and medications used to mitigate this, and to maintain adequate cerebral perfusion pressure.
Even given the absolute best-case scenario, his racing career is done. The likelihood of a full recovery in any event is questionable at this point. But, even so, no one in their right mind would get back into a race car after such an episode. The brain can only take so much.
And, again, I've taken care of many patients in this scenario and a "good" recovery is often considered someone who is able to feed themselves and take care of basic activities of daily living without assistance. While I clearly don't know exactly what his clinical condition is, I'm not a gambling man based on the media reports thus far that his is going to be one in the "miraculous" recovery group.
My best wishes go out to his friends, family, and loved ones.
Now, feel free to continue back to the debate about pumpkins and helmets.
~Dr. Imago