Aquatic Therapy. Physical Properties and Principles of Water  Buoyancy  Archimedes Principle  Percentages for different submersed body parts  Specific.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 13 Fluid Pressure.
Advertisements

Buoyancy.
Chapter 17 Review Properties of Matter.
Fluid Mechanics Liquids and gases have the ability to flow
Forces in Fluids Ch. 11.
Properties of Fluids Buoyancy: Floating and Sinking SCI 8: Fluids Unit Curriculum Outcomes Addressed: - Describe situations in life where the density of.
Chapter 15: Human Movement in a Fluid Medium
The tendency or ability of an object to float.
DENSITY & BUOYANCY. BUOYANCY BUOYANCY = the ability to float in a fluid. Examples of fluids = water, air BUOYANT FORCE = the upward force that acts on.
FLUID PRESSURE Physical Science 9 th Jacqueline P. Hancock.
Chapter 3 Section 2 Buoyancy and Density
Faculty of Engineering
 VISCOSITY  DENSITY & TEMPERATURE  BUOYANCY  COMPRESSION  PRESSURE.
Hydrotherapy Hydrotherapy.
Liquids Chapter 19.
Liquids Liquids Pressure = Force/Area Pressure = Force/Area Pressure Liquid = Weight Density x Depth Pressure Liquid = Weight Density x Depth 1 Liter.
WATER AS THERAPEUTIC AGENT Hydrotherapy is one of the eldest therapeutic methods for managing physical dysfunctions. It has been used for the treatment.
Fluid Mechanics Liquids and gases have the ability to flow They are called fluids There are a variety of “LAWS” that fluids obey Need some definitions.
Ch. 11 Forces in Fluids. Pressure Pressure-force per unit area on a surface Unit of measurement: pascal (Pa): 1 N/m 2 A fluid is any substance that can.
Aquatic Therapy in Rehabilitation Chapter 15. Aquatic Therapy Useful tool to facilitate training & fitness Movement skill & strength can be enhanced Effects.
Wednesday, April 3 Warm-up: Agenda:
BUOYANCY ARCHIMEDES’ PRINCIPLE. less density float Objects with less density will float on fluids with greater density. more densitysink Objects with.
Fluids 101 Chapter 10. Fluids Any material that flows and offers little resistance to changing its shape. –Liquids –Gases –Plasma?
C HAPTER N INE : F ORCES AND F LUIDS -- B UOYANCY Forces influence the motion and properties of fluids.
Floating and Sinking. Buoyancy When you pick up an object underwater it seems much lighter due to the upward force that water and other fluids exert known.
Chapter 19 Liquids.
Buoyancy What is buoyancy? The ability to float..
Hydrostatics Lesson 6 © nitatravels. Fluids are Everywhere  Liquids or Gasses  Air is a fluid!!!  Typically take the shape of their container.
Unit 6 : Part 1 Fluids.
Fluids Physics 202 Lecture 3. Pascal’s principle: any pressure change will flow through the entire fluid equally.
13 Aquatic Therapeutic Exercise.
PRESSURE in WATER F = force exerted by water against a body A = area of that body over which F is applied water pressure = mass of water above body pressure.
Properties of Fluids 16-2.
DENSITY & BUOYANCY. BUOYANCY BUOYANCY = the ability to float in a fluid. Examples of fluids = water, air BUOYANT FORCE = the upward force that acts on.
Liquids Definite volume but no definite shape!. Liquids Pressure Buoyancy Archimedes’ Principle Density Effects Pascal’s Principle.
PRESSURE in WATER F = force exerted by water against submersed body  A = area of that body over which F is applied  water pressure = mass of water above.
(c) McGraw Hill Ryerson 2007 Science 8 Unit 3 - Fluids Chapter 9 Forces influence the motion and properties of fluids.
Chapter 10.4 Learning Goals
Fluid Mechanics Liquids and gases have the ability to flow
Forces in Fluids Chapter 13. Fluid Pressure  Section 13-1.
CONCEPTUAL PHYSICS Liquids.
Forces in Fluids Section 6-1 Pressure. Forces in Fluids What is pressure?  A force pushing on a surface How do force and pressure differ?  Your downward.
Floating and Sinking Whatever floats your boat!. Warm-up 1. Observe the two beakers on the front table and record your observations. 2. Predict- will.
PRESSURE in WATER F = force exerted by water against submersed body F = force exerted by water against submersed body  A = area of that body over which.
PRESSURE & BUOYANCY Ch 11. I. PRESSURE A.The force exerted on a surface divided by the area over which the force is exerted. B.Pressure = Force = Newton’s.
ATHT 333 Aquatic Therapy. When to use Research shows it to be beneficial with  Spinal cord injury  Orthopedic injury  Chronic pain  Cerebral palsy.
DENSITY & BUOYANCY.
CHECK POINT – FLUID PHYSICS DR. BROWNE. 1.Earth’s ________________ is made of a mix of gases called ______________. 1.The molecules of air are in constant.
Chapter 9 Forces influence the motion and properties of fluids.
WATER IN MOTION Sekar.L INTRODUCTION  Water at motion becomes a complex physical substance.  Many aspects of fluid motion are still incompletely understood.
DENSITY & BUOYANCY.
Fluids and Elasticity Readings: Chapter 15.
Floating and Sinking.
3-3 Floating & Sinking.
Foil Boat Activity By Lauren Duderstadt.
Forces in Fluids.
Physical Science 9 Chapter 16:Solids, Liquids, and Gases
Chapter 19: Liquids.
Floating and Sinking.
Floating and Sinking Chapter 11 Section 2.
Forces in Fluids: Buoyant Force
FLUIDS MECHANICS.
BUOYANT FORCE.
Fluids Review Test Friday.
DENSITY & BUOYANCY.
Fluid Properties Chapter 16 Section 2.
Properties of Fluids.
Jeopardy Hosted by Ms. T.
Properties of Fluids.
DENSITY & BUOYANCY.
Presentation transcript:

Aquatic Therapy

Physical Properties and Principles of Water  Buoyancy  Archimedes Principle  Percentages for different submersed body parts  Specific Gravity  Density of object relative to water  A ratio  >1 sink  < 1 float  Not Constant

Aquatic Therapy

Physical Properties and Principles of Water  Hydrodynamics  Viscosity  Resistance due to friction of fluid molecules  Cohesion vs adhesion

Physical Properties and Principles of Water  Form Drag  Depends on shape  Pressure differences at opposite ends  Related to turbulence  How to adjust form drag?

Physical Properties and Properties of Water  Wave Drag  Acts at the interface of two different fluids  Air and water  Greater speed greater wave drag  Reduces if under water  Look at wake created

Physical Properties and Properties of Water  Hydrostatic Pressure  The pressure from fluid is exerted equally on all surfaces of an immersed object at any given depth  Greater depth of immersion = greater pressure

Exercise Equipment  Assistive Devices  Flotation cuff  Pull buoys  Vest, belts  Kick boards  Resistive Devices  Water shoes, fins, boots, webbed gloves, paddles, balls,

 Indications  Advantages  Buoyancy  Warmth of water  Reduction of compressive forces  Neuromuscular control and balance  Psychological boost  Disadvantages  Costly  Time consuming  Precautions  Contrainidications

Principles in Developing Aquatic Therapy Programs  Warm-up and Cool down  Deficiencies  Consider all Principles  Resistance  Progression  Early, middle, advance, end-phase