The limit to how fast a human can run is 9.48
seconds for the 100-meter race, 0.10 seconds faster than Usain
Bolt’s current world record, according to Stanford biologist Mark
Denny. That is, if you are talking about
natural human beings. In a 2008 study published in the Journal of
Experimental Biology, Denny modeled the fastest human running speed
using records of men’s 100-meter race results going back to the 1900s.
Denny plotted the annual best times in the race into a graph and used computer programs to come up with an equation whose curve best models the behavior of the actual graph he obtained. The curve showed humanly achievable time for the 100-meter race would level off at 9.48 seconds. ‘They haven’t plateaued yet, but you can definitely see the data are bending a little towards that plateau,’ Denny says.
Denny plotted the annual best times in the race into a graph and used computer programs to come up with an equation whose curve best models the behavior of the actual graph he obtained. The curve showed humanly achievable time for the 100-meter race would level off at 9.48 seconds. ‘They haven’t plateaued yet, but you can definitely see the data are bending a little towards that plateau,’ Denny says.
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