3. Paralympics Mascot
Olympics Mascot
India’s 1st Javellin Throw Gold Winner
Player With Most Gold Medals In A Single Swimming Match.
Fastest Man To Run 100 Meters
Highest Medal
2nd Highest Medal
3rd Highest Medal
Name Of The Worldwide Event. Their Mascot Is Miraitowa.
Played By Disabled Players. Their Mascot Is Someity.
Is An Individual Or Team Racing Sport That Requires The Use
Of One's Entire Body To Move Through Water. The Sport Takes
Place In Pools Or Open Water.
It Is The Most Widely-practiced Martial Art In The World, And
The Second-most Practiced Sport Worldwide Behind Soccer.
4. Is A Racket Sport That Can Be Played Individually Against A
Single Opponent (Singles) Or Between Two Teams Of Two
Players Each (Doubles). Each Player Uses A Racket That Is
Strung With Cord To Strike A Hollow Rubber Ball Covered With
Felt Over Or Around A Net And Into The Opponent's Court.
Played With Light Rackets. Players Must Serve The Shuttlecock
Over The Net So That It Lands On The Correct Side Of The
Opponent's Court.
Is A Combat Sport Involving Grappling-type Techniques Such
As Clinch Fighting, Throws And Takedowns, Joint Locks, Pins
And Other Grappling Holds.
The Sport Of Firing At Targets Of Various Kinds With Rifles,
Handguns (Pistols And Revolvers), And Shotguns As An
Exercise In Marksmanship.
Any Of Various Forms Of Team Game Involving Kicking (And In
Some Cases Also Handling) A Ball, In Particular (In The Uk)
Soccer
8. Person eating food and is
gaining energy.
Food has digested.
Energy is being used in cycling.
Food energy is getting converted to Kinetic Energy.
9. Bicycles turn energy created by our bodies
into kinetic energy.
A bicycle can convert up to 90 percent of a person's
energy and movement into kinetic energy. This
energy is then used to move the bike.
The rider's balance and momentum help keep the
bike stable while travelling along a path.
10.
11.
12. Without math, bicycling cannot exist.
Geometric figures are used in the construction of a
bicycle. Wheel circumferences and frame angles
are calculated using math, so the rider could
select the right bicycle.
Could you imagine a bike
with square or even
octagon
wheels? A shape other
than a circle has edges
and would create bumps
and friction.
13. The force used by pedalling allows the gears of a
bike to spin the back wheel. As the back wheel
rotates, the tire uses friction to grip the surface
and move the bike in the desired direction.
A cyclist uses different gear combinations for
different terrains. How is the right gear
combination calculated?
14. Gear ratio and speed
speeds
mph
revolutions per
minute
60
(steady
pedalling
)
120
(very fast
pedalling
)
ratio
1
2
3
4.95
9.9
14.85
19.8
9.9
19.8
29.7
39.6
The speed of the bike is determined by the gear
ratio, the size of the wheels and how fast the pedals
are turning
Distance travelled by wheel in 1 hour = wheel circumference x revolutions per
hour x gear ratio
Distance
travelled by
wheel in 1 hour
= 2 x 50 x 60 x 4
= 24000m
≈ 15 miles
1 mile ≈ 1600 metres
using the different gears and
varying your pedalling speed
enables you to reach a range of
speeds:
of course, you can only reach the
higher speeds if have the power
to pedal very fast in a high gear...
A cyclist is in a gear with a ratio of 4.
The bike has wheels with a 2m circumference.
They are pedalling at 50 revolutions per minute.
What is their speed in miles per hour?
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21. A series of international athletic contests held
in a different country once every four years
•The Olympics include the summer games, winter
games, and Paralympics Games. Each type of games
is held every four years, with the winter and summer
games held two years apart from each other.
United States (2827 medals)
22. 1896 Athens, Greece
1900 Paris, France
1904 St. Louis, United States
1908 London, England
1912 Stockholm, Sweden
1916 Cancelled (WWI – Berlin Had
Been Awarded)
1920 Antwerp, Belgium
1924 Paris, France
1928 Amsterdam, Netherlands
1932 Los Angeles, United States
1936 Berlin, Germany
1940 Cancelled (WWII – Tokyo Had
Been Awarded)
1944 Cancelled (WWII – London Had
Been Awarded)
1948 London, England
1952 Helsinki, Finland
1956 Melbourne, Australia
1960 Rome, Italy
1964 Tokyo, Japan
1968 Mexico City, Mexico
1972 Munich, West Germany
1976 Montreal, Canada
1980 Moscow, Soviet Union
1984 Los Angeles, United States
1988 Seoul, South Korea
1992 Barcelona, Spain
1996 Atlanta, United States
2000 Sydney, Australia
2004 Athens, Greece
2008 Beijing, China
2012 London, England
2016 Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
2020 Tokyo, Japan (Postponed To 2021
Due To The Coronavirus Pandemic)
23.
24. Michael Phelps
Michael Fred Phelps II is an American former competitive swimmer. He
is the most successful and most decorated Olympian of all time with
a total of 28 medals. Phelps also holds the all-time records for
Olympic gold medals, Olympic gold medals in individual events, and
Olympic medals in individual events.
He set 39 records during his historic career. Retired since 2016, he
now holds only four world records and four individual Olympic
records.
He doesn’t display his medals. He actually doesn’t often look
at them. He usually only takes them out when asked. He may
have also temporarily misplaced one for a while.
•Michael Phelps
•Mary Kom
•Neeraj Chopra
•Usain Bolt
•PV Sindhu
•Mirabai Chanu
25. Mary Kom
Chungneijang Mary Kom
Hmangte, popularly known as
Mary Kom, born in Manipur, is
an Indian Olympic boxer.
She started playing boxing at the
age of 15.
Mary Kom created history by
becoming the first woman ever
to win 6 World Championships.
She achieved the feat by
bagging the first position at
2002 Antalya, 2005 Podolsk,
2006 New Delhi, 2008 Ningbo
City, 2010 Bridgetown and
2018 New Delhi World
Championship events.
Neeraj Chopra
Neeraj Chopra VSM is an Indian
track and field athlete who
competes in the javelin throw.
As of August 2021, he is
ranked as world No. 2 by the
World Athletics organisation. A
Junior Commissioned Officer in
the Indian Army, Chopra is the
first track and field athlete to
win a gold medal for India at
the Olympics.
Chopra won a gold medal in the
2016 IAAF World U20
Championships in Bydgoszcz,
Poland and set a world junior
record of 86.48 m, becoming
the first Indian athlete to
achieve a world record, at the
same time setting a new
national record.
26. Usain Bolt
Usain St. Leo Bolt, OJ, CD, OLY is a
retired Jamaican sprinter, widely
considered to be the greatest
sprinter of all time. He is the
world record holder of 100
metres, 200 metres and 4 × 100
metres relay.
Usain Bolt set the current 100m
world record at the 2009 IAAF
World Championships, clocking
an incredible 9.58 seconds for the
feat.
Usain Bolt is a very popular figure
amongst sports fans and the
media. His achievements are so
remarkable, it got him nicknames
like ‘Bolt from the blue’ and
‘Lightning Bolt’.
Pv Sindhu
Pusarla Venkata Sindhu is an Indian
professional badminton player.
Over the course of her career,
Pusarla has won medals at
multiple tournaments including
Olympics and on the BWF circuit
including a gold at the 2019
World Championships.
For more than 12 years, her father
would wake up at 3 am to take
her to Pullela Gopichand's
academy where she trained. The
distance they travelled was
around 60 kilometres twice a
day. "From Marredpally he used
to drop and pick her (Sindhu) up
from Gopichand's Academy at
Gachibowli, driving 60-km twice
a day.
27. Mirabai Chanu
Saikhom Mirabai Chanu is an
Indian weightlifter. She won the
silver medal at the 2020 Tokyo
Olympics in Women's 49 kg
category. Mirabai Chanu has
won the World Championships
and multiple medals at the
Commonwealth Games. She
was awarded the Padma Shri by
the Government of India for her
contributions to the sport.
Mirabai Chanu, who created a
success story in Tokyo, had to
deal with depression after the
failure in the Rio Olympics.
The year 2017 was high in her
career when she became the
world champion.