by turmoil » Tue 01 Nov 2005, 21:46:21
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Caoimhan', 'S')o how energy efficient is the human body?
A gasoline engine is only about 25% efficient, meaning it will turn 32,000 kilocalories in that gallon of gasoline into approximately 33.5 megajoules of work.
Just idle curiosity.
The
How Stuff Works site has some great info but I'll chip in.
It depends on what the body is doing. One thing it has to do all the time is maintain a body heat of 98.6 F, and even after millions of years of mammalian evolution, it probably requires a chuck of our energy intake.
If you ask, how efficient is the body at <task>, then we can take calories burned and ask, what percent of intake was used in this task? In the
bicycle gas milage thread we discovered that efficiency can vary a lot from person to person based on fitness.
But the body's purpose is to acquire, process, and store chemicals to maintain a fat storage, body heat, and electrical brain function.
"If you are a real seeker after truth, it's necessary that at least once in your life you doubt all things as far as possible"-Rene Descartes
"When you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains however improbable must be the truth"-Sherlock Holmes