This document discusses physics and its applications in health sciences. It begins by defining physics as the study of matter, energy, and forces. It then discusses how physics relates to other sciences like biology, chemistry, and earth sciences. The document outlines several ways physics is used in health sciences, such as in athletics, physical therapy, hearing, ultrasound, and medical imaging technologies like X-rays. Physics principles like Archimedes' principle and properties of waves are important to understanding concepts in health and medicine.
4. Life Sciences
(Biology)
- It is the study of life and
looks at how different life
forms work.
BIOLOGY Subsets:
• Botany
• Zoology
• Genetics
• Human Biology
• Nutrition
• Genetics
• Medicine
5. - The fields of study concerned
with the solid Earth, its
waters, and the air that
envelops it.
- It deals with physical and
chemical constitution of the
earth and its atmosphere
• Geology
• Oceanography
• Astronomy
• Meteorology
Earth Sciences
6. Physical
Sciences
- Focus on the physical
aspects of how things
happen within or in it.
• Chemistry
• Astronomy
• Physics
8. • Comes from the Greek word “φύσις” (fýsis)
that means nature.
• Physics is the study of matter in the
perspective of energy and motion. It involves
how matter reacts with energy, what causes
the energy, and how it affects the matter all
around us, including ourselves.
www.study.com/academy/lesson/the-main-branches-of-science.html
PHYSICS
9. PHYSICS
• Physics is the science of matter and its
motion—the science that deals with
concepts such as force, energy, mass,
and charge.
• As an experimental science, its goal is to
understand the natural world. In one form
or another, physics is one of the oldest
academic disciplines; through its modern
subfield of astronomy, it may be the oldest
of all.
- Science Daily
10. PHYSICS
• Physics aims to describe the function of
everything around us, from the movement
of tiny charged particles to the motion of
people, cars, and spaceships. In fact,
almost everything around you can be
described quite accurately by the laws of
physics.
• -Mr. Andersen from Courses Lumen Learning
11. Physics is a major science, dealing with the
systematic study of the basic properties of the
universe, the forces they exert on one another, and
the results produced by these forces. It is the
remaining core of natural philosophy and concerns
itself with questions of what underlies the
interactions of matter, energy, space and time, and
even with what constitutes reality.
12. It is not surprising that a field that has produced the theories of
relativity and quantum mechanics and has drastically altered our
concept of the universe has an aura of mystery --- of being remote
from everyday experience and impossible to understand. Once
one becomes accustomed to looking for an explanation of various
phenomena in terms of underlying scientific principles, it is
possible to see physics everywhere. The flight of birds, the
operation of a microwave oven, the color of the sunset, and the
pitch of one’s voice all have basic explanations in physics. Those
explanations can be understood by anyone, not just professional
scientists.
13. Physics is closely related to the other natural sciences and, in
a sense, encompasses them. Chemistry, for example deals
with the interaction of atoms to form molecules. Much of
modern geology is largely a study of the physics of the earth
and is known as geophysics. Astronomy deals with the
physics of the stars and outer space. Even living systems are
made up of fundamental particles and, as studied
inbiophysics and biochemistry, they follow the same type of
laws as the simpler particles traditionally studied by a
physicist.
14. NATURE OF PHYSICS
Physics emerged as a separate science only in
the early 19th century, until that time a physicist
was often also a mathematician, philosopher,
chemist, biologist, engineer, or even primarily a
political leader or an artist. Today, the field has
grown to such an extent that with few exceptions
modern physicists have to limit their attention to
one or two branches of the science.
15. NATURE OF PHYSICS
Once the fundamental aspects of a new field are discovered
and understood, they become the domain of engineers and
other applied scientist. The 19th century discoveries in
electricity and magnetism, for example, are now the
concentrations of electrical and communication engineers;
the properties of matter discovered at the beginning of the
20th century have been applied in electronics; and the
discoveries of nuclear physics, have passed into the hands
of nuclear engineers for applications to peaceful or military
uses.
16. The Scientific
Method
– is a method that is extremely
effective in gaining, organizing,
and applying new knowledge.
18. Physics in the
Health Science
• A science that deals with the
Applications of Matter, Energy,
Space and Time in the Diagnosis
Treatment and prevention of
disease and injury.
19. Physics in the
Health Science • Physics, whether one is aware of
it or not, is encountered in many
situations --- recreational,
occupational, and even social.
The situations described in this
section are but a few, of the
many, particularly in the health
sciences.
20. PHYSICS IN HEALTH SCIENCES
• Athletics
• Traction systems
• Nutrition and Exercise
• Body Temperature
• Physical Therapy
• Blood Flow and Respiration
• Hearing
• Ultrasonic Scanners
21. PHYSICS IN HEALTH SCIENCES
• Electrical Safety
• Nervous System
• Vision
• From microwave Deep Heating to Sun Lamps
• Spectroanalysis
• X rays
• Radiotherapy, Radiation Diagnostics, and Radiation
Protection
22. Athletics
• Athletics is a group of sporting
events that involves competitive
running, jumping, throwing, and
walking. The most common types of
athletics competitions are track and
field, road running, cross country
running, and race walking.
23. Traction
System
• Some traction systems seem to have wires,
pulleys, and weights going every which way and
performing altogether mysterious tasks. The traction
system will show the importance of not only the
strength of a force, but also the direction of the force
and the point where it is applied. The strength of the
force in traction will obviously depend on how large a
weight is used. The direction of the force will be the
same as the direction of the wire attached to the
subject. The point of application is the place where
the wire is attached. The analysis if the traction
system is by using Newton’s laws.
24. Nutrition and Exercise
• Few things have caught the attention of the
public as have nutrition and exercise over
the last several years. It turns out that work
is the manifestation of energy changing
forms. In humans, work changes stored food
energy into heat, motion and other forms of
energy. When work, energy, power, and
efficiency are studied, they will be related to
food energy and human exercise. Energy is
one of the central concepts of physics.
25. Body Temperature
• Humans and other warm-blooded animals
maintain a constant body temperature by
converting food energy to heat energy. However,
the body continues to produce heat even when
surrounding temperature are higher than the
body temperature. That excess heat is
dissipated by perspiring. Various methods of
heat transfer are presented, and it will become
clear why perspiration is the body’s only
possible method of dissipating heat when
surrounding temperatures are high.
26. Body Temperature
• We now know that an increase
in temperature corresponds to an
increase in the average kinetic energy
of atoms and molecules. A result of that
increased motion is that the average
distance between atoms and molecules
increases as
the temperature increases.
27. Physical Therapy
• A great deal of physical therapy
takes place in water because the
water helps to support the weight of
the person. Being in water greatly
reduces the effective weight of the
person and of his limbs, making it
possible for him to perform
exercises that would be impossible
out of the water. The underlying
physical principle is called
Archimedes’ principle and the
physics of fluids.
28. Physical Therapy
• When you are immersed in
water, you feel that you are
lighter and more buoyant. The
general concept that governs
floating and sinking is
called Archimedes Principle.
An object immersed in liquid
experiences an upward force
called upthrust or buoyancy
according to this principle.
29. • Physics is the study of matter, motion, energy, and forces. It includes
concepts of gravity, electricity, magnetism, heat, light, and
radioactivity.
• Physical therapy is the treatment of the human disorders through
physical motions of the body. It is typically used to help in the
recovery from injury, surgery, or an impairment through the stretching
or strengthening of parts of the body. These conditions typically
involve muscles, bones, tendons, nerves, and skin.
• One is manipulating physical objects with forces when doing physical
therapy. The methods of physics are useful in understanding how
much force a patient is able to exert or in measuring a range of
motion. But mostly, the names for these two fields just share the
same root word. They concern themselves with physical objects and
the motions of those objects.
30. Hearing
• Hearing is the perception of sound. Sound is the first example of a
wave phenomenon. Hearing and sound will be studied in chapter 8
and 9, where it will be shown how hearing does not simply
reproduce the actual physical properties of sound. For example,
loudness is the perceived intensity of sound waves. However,
humans do not perceived ultrasound at all, so loudness is not a
perfect indication of intensity and hence differs from that physical
characteristics. On the atomic scale, sound is a disturbance of
atoms that is far more ordered than their thermal motions.
31. Ultrasonic Scanners
• Ultrasound is any sound that is so high pitched that
the average person can’t hear it. Ultrasound still
behaves in a fashion similar to audible sound waves.
For example, it scatters from boundaries between
substances and so can be used to probe the inside
of the body noninvasively, much as submarines use
sonar to view objects in dark waters. Ultrasonic
waves can be made perfectly safe by keeping their
intensity low enough. If this is done, the ultrasound
can not cause injury because it lacks energy to do
so. Ultrasonic scanners are compared with other
tools for probing the interior of the body, such as x-
rays.
32. Electrical Safety
• Certain medical procedures make
hospital patients extremely sensitive
to electric shock. It tackles on the
three-wire-system, proper grounding
of appliances and the use of circuit
breakers. As usual, the study of
electrical safety will be based on the
principles of physics.
33. Nervous System
• The nervous system is a complex of biological
electric circuits that controls the muscles, among
other things. Bioelectricity can be recorded and
interpreted to yield great deal of information on the
functioning of certain body organs. The most
common such recording is the electrocardiogram,
literally recording of the electrical impulses that
control the beating of the heart. Electrocardiograms
give detailed information about the condition of that
organ. Similarly, information can be obtained about
brain functions by recording its electrical impulses in
an electroencephalogram.
34. Nervous System
• The basic unit of the nervous
system are known as neurons which
allow the transmission and reception of
electrical impulses. There are over 100
billion neurons and each measure about
10 μm each. The neuron is made up of
different components that
allow nerve impulses to be carried
across.