Is there a way to compare a human being to an engine? - podcast episode cover

Is there a way to compare a human being to an engine?

Dec 17, 20143 min
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Episode description

Human muscles are essentially biological engines. In terms of efficiency, biological engines are amazing. Listen in as Marshall Brain calculates human efficiency in this episode.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Brainstuff from house stuff Works dot com where smart happens. I am Marshall Brain with today's question, is there a way to compare a human being to an engine in terms of efficiency? It turns out that biological engines, which is what the muscles in your body are, are pretty amazing in terms of efficiency. To find out how efficient, let's look at how many calories a person burns while

riding a bicycle. If you look on the web, you'll find that a person riding a bicycle at fifteen miles per hour or twenty four kilometers per hour burns about point o four nine calories per pound per minute. So a hundred and seventy five pound person burns five fifteen calories in an hour, or about thirty four calories per mile. That works out to twenty one calories per kilometer. A gallon of gasoline about four eaters, contains about thirty one

thousand calories. If a person could drink gasoline, then a person could ride about nine hundred and twelve miles on a gallon of gas, or about three hundred sixty per leader. Considering that a normal car gets about thirty miles to a gallon that's pretty impressive. A human being on a bicycle is about thirty times more efficient than a car going down the road. To be fair, to keep in mind that a car generally weighs a ton or more,

while a bicycle weighs only thirty pounds. Cars also travel a lot faster than fifteen miles per hour, but it's still an interest in comparison. Note also that people can't drink gasoline. However, people can drink vegetable oil, which contains nearly the same number of calories per gallon. The people riding in a race like the Tour de France are

riding more like twenty five miles per hour. Because air resistance rises very quickly with speed, they're burning about three times more calories, something like a hundred calories per mile in a hundred miles stage of the tour. A racer might burn something like eight thousand to ten thousand calories in one day, so they're getting only about three hundred miles per gallon. The only way to replace those calories

is to eat a lot of food. For more on this and thousands of other topics, is that how stuff works dot com, and don't forget to check out the brain Stuff blog on the house stuff works dot Com home page. You can also follow brain Stuff on Facebook or Twitter at brain stuff hs W

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