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World record speeds for two Olympics events have fallen over time. We can go faster

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World record speeds for two Olympics events have fallen over time. We can go faster

On land, records in the 100-meter dash have been in place since 2009 for men and 1988 for women. Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt ran the race in just 9.58 seconds with a top speed of nearly 40 kilometers per hour, beating his previous world record by just under a tenth of a second (SN: 11/20/09). Meanwhile, the women’s record is held by American sprinter Florence Griffith Joyner, who completed the distance in 10.49 seconds.

Based on human gait and our muscle strength, research suggests that people might be capable of running as fast as roughly 60 km/h. That’s 100 meters in 5.625 seconds. But the realities of sprinting speed largely depend on technique, says Ross Miller, a biomechanist at the University of Maryland in College Park.

“A sprint should be as hard as you can every step,” Miller says. “Maximum, instantaneous effort all the time.” Top speed depends on how little time our feet need to come in contact with the ground while still applying the force necessary to propel us forward.

It’s possible that no one has yet run at maximum speed because no one has come along with the physical ability, Miller says. Or it could be because the right person hasn’t had access to the training, or hasn’t “put it all together yet in the perfect race.” In the past century, the fastest time for the 100-meter dash has shrunk by one second for men and about three seconds for women.

It’s much harder for humans to go fast in water. In the 50-meter freestyle, the men’s record belongs to César Cielo Filho, a swimmer from Brazil who swam the pool’s length in 20.91 seconds in 2009 — just under one-quarter of Bolt’s record-setting average running speed. In 2023, Swedish swimmer Sarah Sjöström swam the race in 23.61 seconds to earn the women’s record. Both top times are roughly three seconds fewer than the first records set in the 1970s.

Swimming is slower than running largely because water is far denser than air, says Timothy Wei, a fluid dynamist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. But also, “we all have this bowling ball between our shoulders. And this thing creates a huge amount of drag.”

For swimming speed, it’s unknown how much room there is for growth. Swimming with the body parallel to the water’s surface can help eliminate the drag on our less-than-ideal frames. Superfast freestyle swimmers also raise their elbows as high as possible above the water, plunging their arms dramatically close to perpendicular with the water to pull themselves forward.

“If you get your technique right, and you can get your stroke rate as high as possible,” Wei says, “that combination is what’s going to get you to go as fast as you can.”

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