1. Which type of respiration requires oxygen?
2. Which type of respiration produces lactic acid?
1. Aerobic respiration
2. Anaerobic respiration
What does EPOC stand for?
Excess Post-exercise Oxygen Consumption
What happens to heart rate during exercise?
It increases.
What is force measured in?
Newtons (N)
Name the three parts of a lever.
Fulcrum, effort and load/ resistance
Complete the equation:
Glucose + _____ → Carbon dioxide + water
Oxygen
State why oxygen is needed after exercise.
To remove lactic acid.
Name three short-term effects of exercise.
1. The resistance to a change in motion is known as?
2. Which of Newtons laws does this relate to
1. Inertia
2. Newtons 1st Law
Draw a second class lever, labelling the 3 components of the lever
Fulcrum resistance effort
^ v ^
Name one advantage of aerobic respiration.
Produces large amounts of energy / can continue for long periods.
EPOC occurs after which energy system has been used?
Anaerobic
Which changes are short-term effects and which are long-term effects?
Short-term:
Long-term:
1. What is the equation for force
2. define each letter in the equation
3. State how each is measured
F=m x a
Force= A push or pull action applied to an object. Newtons (N)
Mass= The amount of matter in an object. Kilograms (kg)
Acceleration= The rate at which velocity changes. Metres per second squared (m/s²)
During elbow flexion, what is the falcrum
Elbow joint.
Describe, using examples of a different situations from one named physical activity, when there is a change in energy demand (must identify what respiration is used)
example: Football: A player sprints to reach the ball (anaerobic) and then slows down or pauses to look for a pass (aerobic).
Identify 4 factors that affect recovery time
Describe 3 long-term changes to the heart as a result of regular aerobic exercise.
Explain how two named forces act on a sprinter when they are running.
Gravity:
Pulls the sprinter towards the ground.
Air resistance:
Acts against the direction of the sprinter, slows the sprinter down, and increases as the sprinter runs faster.
Muscular force:
The leg muscles generate force to propel the sprinter forwards.
Ground reaction force:
As the sprinter pushes against the blocks or ground, the blocks or ground push back against the sprinter.
Friction:
Spiked running shoes create greater friction between the foot and the track, preventing the sprinter from slipping.
Accept other appropriate examples.
For heading a ball in football:
1. What class of lever is this an example of?
2. What is the fulcrum?
1. First-class lever
2. The neck joint (between the skull and the vertebral column)
Describe three differences between aerobic and anaerobic respiration.
Describe the process of Excess Post-exercise Oxygen Consumption (EPOC) during recovery (3 marks)
State three long-term effects of exercise that a cross-country runner may experience.
A 70 kg footballer accelerates at 3 m/s². A 90 kg rugby player accelerates at 2 m/s².
1. How much force does each athlete produce? with correct measurement.
2. Which athlete produces the greater force?
Footballer: F = 70 × 3 = 210 N
Rugby player: F = 90 × 2 = 180 N
The footballer produces the greater force.
Explain one advantage and one disadvantage of a third-class lever.