Had world-record sprinter Usain Bolt not begun his chest-beating celebrations 20m before the finish of the Olympic 100m final in August, he would have smashed his world record by a further 0,14 seconds, according to physicists who have analysed the race.
The supremely confident Jamaican runner did shave 0,03 seconds off the previous world record of 9,72 seconds — which he had set in May this year. But researchers have calculated that had he kept running he would have clocked up a time of 9,55 seconds.
The 22-year-old sprinter also won Olympic gold in the 200m final, with a record time of 19,30 seconds. ”I just blew my mind and blew the world’s mind,” he told reporters at the Games.
Hans Eriksen, and colleagues at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics at the University of Oslo in Norway, analysed television footage of the race, focusing on ”Lightning Bolt” and the second-placed athlete, Richard Thompson.
Both sprinters slowed down in the final two seconds of the race, but Bolt’s high jinks cut his speed more.
If he had slowed down by the same amount as Thompson, he would have notched up a time of 9,61 seconds. But since Bolt comprehensively outperformed Thompson over the first eight seconds, the scientists considered that that calculation might be too conservative.
”We don’t mean to say that this is the final and ultimate result,” Eriksen told New Scientist magazine. ”Instead, it’s a fun application of simple physics and we’ve done the best we can.”
It is difficult to get accurate measurements from ordinary TV footage, which records at 30 frames a second or less, said Matthew Bundle, of the University of Wyoming, Laramie, who studies human locomotion. But he said the times estimated by the researchers were reasonable. –