What is Delta V ? Minor impacts

We tend to assess the severity of a collision in terms the injuries suffered by the occupants of the vehicles. But the injuries that occur in any particular accident depend on a lot of things including vehicle crashworthiness, restraint usage, occupant characteristics and it is generally thought, vehicle speeds. Vehicle speeds, however, are related to severity in a complicated fashion, consider the following: Recently the space shuttle ran into the Russian space station. Both vehicles were traveling at about 18,000 miles per hour! Yet the impact was not severe, it did no damage, it was a planned docking maneuver. It was not a bad accident because both vehicles were traveling in the same direction, their relative velocity or closing speed was only about 1 mph. Thus absolute speed is not the only determinant of impact severity, and is in fact only a contributing factor.

Suppose then that two vehicles are heading toward one another on the highway at 100 mph and they collide. Is this necessarily a bad accident? No, they could sideswipe and do little damage to each other. If they hit head on it would be a different matter of course. So impact configuration is also important. Finally, consider the importance of mass ratios (relative weight). If an 80,000# truck runs into a 2400# car, the car will always be worse off.

In general then the severity of an accident will depend on these three factors, and not just on speed alone. All three factors combine in a given impact to produce “delta V”, the speed change that the vehicle experiences as a result of the impact.. Note that it is virtually impossible for two vehicles to stop dead as a result of an impact – road accidents are not like barrier collisions – both vehicles will change speed as a result of their impact however. In the most general case, they will both be moving before the collision and they will continue to move after the impact phase of the accident is over. This change in speed (actually velocity – speed with an associated direction) is delta v and is the accepted measure of the absolute severity of the impact.

About Roland

Roland was born in Nashville, Tennessee and raised in Mt. Juliet, Tennessee. The first few years he resided in Paris, France with his mother who was French. In Hendersonville, he attended Beech Senior High School where played soccer and studied in the honors curriculum. Subsequently, he pursued two majors in political science and economics while graduating in three years.

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