Hi.
These days I can't do much studying for university, having somehow damaged the cornea of my right eye by getting dirt on my contact lense. This sucks. So I spent some time pondering swordsmanship and physics.
A few years ago, I watched a christmas lecture on physics (with lots of experiments) and one in particular came to my mind as I was shopping for groceries today. The lecturer took two chocolate santas, put them on a table and placed a two by four piece of wood across their heads. Then he proceeded by taking a baseball bat and slamming it on the wooden lath. It broke in two and the santas escaped unharmed. They were eaten later.
Now, what's the relevance of this? The santas were placed directly under the vibrational nodes of the lath and as a result, the wood only rotated in those places, rather than slamming down on them. When we halfsword, we have one hand on the handle of the sword (being one vibrational node), the other very much in the vicinity of the other node. Has anyone ever looked deeper into this effect? I suspect it might very well swallow an appreciable amount of the primary impact energy, even though recieving a blow not directly on the flat will counter this to a degree.
Any thoughts?
