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Clearly there will be differences like air resistance; I'm not interested in that. It seems like you're working against gravity when you're actually running in a way that you're not if you're on a treadmill, but on the other hand it seems like one should be able to take a piece of the treadmill's belt as an inertial reference point. What's going on here?

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  • $\begingroup$ Speaking as a some-time "fell runner", I observe that setting the treadmill to 10% vs running up a road at 10%, I do the same distance in times that differ by less than 5%, often in favour of the road as it happens. i.e. if the surfaces are even I do not observe very much difference at all. Running up actual hills, as opposed to roads, is much slower. Running on the flat I do times that are consistently 2-3% faster on the treadmill, which I presumed was just wind resistance. $\endgroup$
    – ProfRob
    Dec 12, 2014 at 9:03
  • $\begingroup$ What about potential energy. When you reach the top of the hill, your potential energy has increased due to increase in elevation. When you’re done running on the treadmill, you’re still at ground level. $\endgroup$
    – musca999
    Jun 2, 2023 at 4:01

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For me it is axiomatic that machine miles are easier than real miles, but let's analyze the situation.

Assume the runner maintains a constant velocity up the hill, or remains stationary in the frame of the gym on the treadmill. In both cases the runner's acceleration is zero, so we know that her legs must provide a constant force with upward magnitude $mg$, and the they have to do this against a surface passing by at an angle $\theta$ below the horizontal and moving with a velocity $v$.

The kinematics in the runners frame of reference look the same. This is not the cause of the difference in perceived difficulty.

I have always assumed that the difference in difficulty was two fold:

  • Wind resistance is not really negligible.
  • The treadmill presents a very uniform reliable surface and the runner need not lift her legs as high to insure non-tripping progress.

Also modern treadmill are designed to be relatively easy on the knees, and the accomplish this by having a slightly springy feeling which presumably returns some energy to the runner.

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    $\begingroup$ From experience, I agree that treadmill miles are easier. Aside from the possibility of miscalibration, I have a guess that the belt slows down a bit when your foot impacts it, then picks back up the lost speed mostly while you're in the air. Hence, you're not pushed back at quite the speed the treadmill is set to. $\endgroup$ Dec 4, 2010 at 22:54
  • $\begingroup$ @Mark: That's a good observation, to prevent it you'd have to really overbuild the whole thing which would drive the price up to the point that no one would buy it. $\endgroup$ Dec 4, 2010 at 22:57
  • $\begingroup$ I'm inclined to believe this answer, but how does it take into account the conservation of energy? You'll have to excuse me if this is silly; I haven't taken physics since high school (and it's been a few years). $\endgroup$
    – aaron
    Dec 8, 2010 at 9:44
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    $\begingroup$ @aaron: It is not a silly question at all, and the answer is wrapped up in (1) the difference between "work" meaning $W= \vec{f} \dot{} d\vec{x}$ and "work" meaning "man, this is tiring" (see Pavel's answer) and (2) the question of what happens if you just stop running: on the hill, you just stand there; but on the treadmill you come to a stop and stand on the belt and fly back into the gym, land on your butt (if you're lucky) and look really silly because the platform isn't static---the extra energy is expending to maintain your place in the gym despite the motion of the belt. $\endgroup$ Dec 8, 2010 at 23:58
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    $\begingroup$ Couldn't the m of moving my body up a hill be different than the m of moving my legs underneath me on an incline treadmill? $\endgroup$
    – Dave
    Feb 2, 2012 at 16:15
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The word 'difference' may be ambiguous, but let's look at the situation from several points of view.

Energy balance: Indeed, your potential energy does increase in case 1 and not in case 2. Muscles clearly perform the same work, so the energy must go somewhere? Yes, to the electric grid. The treadmill device's engine, to maintain constant velocity, will consume less electrical power to do so (or might even push energy back into the grid, in case of an efficient motor) because your legs are actually pulling it now downwards. If you do the math, you see it exactly compensates.

Muscle work: work, in thermodynamical sense, is not just F*dx. One has to take a machine and consider all interfaces. For example, a spring or a muscle have two ends, and dx in the formula is actually the difference between two paths. Muscle expansion/contraction will be the same, and so is the force. Therefore, they are doing the same work. This work is, the amount of chemical internal energy stored within the muscle converted to mechanical work.

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Assume that the hill and the treadmill have the same angle of elevation (are inclined identically), and that two identical persons A and B are running on them at the same speed $v$. Here the speed of the person B running on the treadmill is obviously zero with respect to the ground, but we will consider the speed of the treadmill's belt to be $-v$.

Let's assume that B and the treadmill are now in a truck which is running up the hill parallel to A, and with the same speed $v$ as A. The truck should be arranged so that B and the treadmill are not inclined while the truck is running up the hill. By our hypothesis, the speed of the upper part of the belt is zero with respect to the ground. This will not affect the effort done by the runner B, because the truck is moving with constant velocity. That is, there are no extra forces caused by inertia, because the truck doesn't accelerate, decelerate or change direction.

By looking now at both runners A and B we see that they are moving parallel with the same speed. They can even do the same moves in synchrony. The angle elevation is the same for both of them too. But B may even not realize that he is climbing a hill, he may think that he is in a room with no windows, which doesn't move. The conditions are identical. So, there is no difference between them.

If our intuition still saids that the treadmill guy is burning less calories, let's imagine that the road on which the person A is running up the hill is a very long treadmill belt. Imagine that underneath the belt there is a treadmill which is doing two things: is moving with the same speed $v$ towards the top of the hill, and the upper side of the belt is moving backwards with $-v$, so that the belt appear to be fixed with respect to the ground. From the outside, the belt doesn't move (and for runner A too). Now, it should be clear that there is no difference.

In the above I assumed that there is no wind, the treadmill and the runners are moving with uniform speed, there is no difference between the runners. I also assumed that gravity is not weaker towards the top of the hill.

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  • $\begingroup$ I think this argument is isomorphic with mine concerning what dosen't account for the perceived difference. I like the truck arrangement: that's clever. $\endgroup$ Dec 12, 2010 at 18:50
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i get the impression this is something that doesn't need complicated physics to explain if you apply a quick common sense test first. if you step up a hill, you have to push the weight of your body upward with each step, or you do not continue moving forward. if you are on a treadmill, you may place your foot forward, but at the same time you would be (on a hill) pushing against the higher point on the ground to move yourself uphill, the treadmill is conveniently lowering your foot back down to the starting point, so you didn't have to actually push yourself uphill very much before you move on to the next step. and it just continues like this, with the treadmill continuously re-lowering your step part way before you ever have the chance to expend that energy you'd need to genuinely push yourself uphill. does anyone else see this?

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Let's get one thing out of the way: The work done against gravity is the same whether you are running on an inclined treadmill or running (at the same velocity) up a hill. You see this by considering the motion in the frame of reference of the runner - you can't tell whether you are moving up or the hill is moving down.

Yet the treadmill is easier for two reasons: wind resistance and coefficient of restitution. Let's start with wind resistance:

Approximate cross sectional area of body - 0.5 m^2 . Speed 2.5 m/s (uphill...). Coefficient of drag 1.2, density of air 1.2 kg/m^2. Drag force is $$F=\frac12\rho v^2 A c_d= 2.3N$$ so power loss due to wind resistance (treadmill vs real life) is only about 6W - a very small fraction of typical power expended.

The real difference lies in the way that the belt "stores" energy. When your foot strikes, it typically is just ahead of your body. With good form the point will be very close and little energy needs to be absorbed as the legs "shortens" while under stress. This is the major loss mechanism in running. When the treadmill replaces the road surface, two things happen: the belt has lower inertia so the runners body is not so decelerated by the impact; and the belt stretches and stores some of the energy elastically. This is where the energy saving comes from - what DMcKee called "easy on the knees".

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Let's estimate some of the contributions discussed in dmckee's answer

Gravity

We can compute the power spent gaining altitude.

$$ W_\text{grav} = mg \dot h = m g v \sin \theta \sim m g v \theta $$ for small angles, with some typical numbers $$ W_\text{grav} = ( 180 \text{ lbs} ) ( 9.8 \text{ m/s}^2 ) ( 1 \text{ mile} / 10 \text{ minutes}) ( 5 \text{ degrees} ) \sim 200 \text{ kcal/hr} $$ if I look up the energy burned running on the web, I get $800 \text{ kcal/hr}$.

So, it would seem, running a 10 minute mile on a 5 degree incline outside takes some 25% more work than on flat ground.

Air resistance

Next let's consider air resistance. We have for its work

$$ W_{\text{air}} = \frac{C_d}{2} \rho A v^3 $$ with typical numbers $$ W_{\text{air}} \sim (0.5) ( 1 \text{ kg/m}^3 ) ( 2 \text{ m} \times 0.5 \text{ m} ) * ( 1 \text{ mile} / 10 \text{ min} )^3 \sim 4 \text{ kcal/hr} $$

which is a much smaller effect. About 1/2 %

Non uniform surface

If we assume that running outside requires us to life our legs an extra 3 inches on average, the power contribution would be $$ W_{\text{rough}} = m_{\text{legs}} g h_{\text{extra}} f_{\text{stride}} $$ with some typical numbers $$ W_{\text{rough}} = ( 0.3 \times 180 \text{ lbs}) ( 9.8 \text{ m/s}^2 ) ( 3 \text{ inches } ) ( 2 / \text{ s}) \sim 30 \text{ kcal/hr} $$ which is larger than wind resistance but only a 4% increase over our base running number.

Springing of landing

What if the coefficient of restitution was different for the treadmill versus land, then everytime you impact you'd need to put in less energy springing off, its power saving should be $$ W_{\text{spring}} = (\Delta r) m g (\Delta h_{\text{center of mass}}) f $$ with some numbers $$ W_{\text{spring}} \sim ( 10 \% )( 180 \text{ lbs} )( 9.8 \text{ m/s}^2 )( 6 \text{ inch} ) \sim 20 \text{ kcal/hr} $$

which is a roughly 3% change.

Not sure what to make of these yet...

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  • $\begingroup$ Again, if this analysis held then tilting the bed of the treadmill wouldn't make it harder to run. Tilting the bed does make it harder to run. $\endgroup$ Jul 18, 2014 at 3:35
  • $\begingroup$ @dmckee You are probably more right than wrong. I've added estimates for the other points you discuss and removed my assertion. But... it seems like gravity has to make a contribution, because I would say running outside is more than 5% harder. $\endgroup$
    – alemi
    Jul 18, 2014 at 3:58
  • $\begingroup$ @dmckee Tilting the bed does make it harder. I never meant to argue against that, but I still want to believe actually gaining altitude should take more work than not. $\endgroup$
    – alemi
    Jul 18, 2014 at 4:01
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I think the most significant difference between work done on an inclined treadmill and work done on a real incline is the gain in potential energy on the real incline. There is no real delta mgz on a treadmill, whereas if you fell back to your starting height from a real incline, you'd certainly notice a large amount of stored energy being turned into kinetic energy!

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(Running up a treadmill) = (expend energy to keep feet moving at a constant speed) + (other effects)

(Running up a hill) = (expend energy to keep feet moving at a constant speed) + (energy to lift center of gravity by hill height) + (other effects)

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    $\begingroup$ If this analysis was viable tilting the bed of the treadmill would not make the running any harder. That is not the case (try it), and the reason is you have to support the body while pushing against a surface that falls away from you. $\endgroup$ Dec 6, 2010 at 17:21
  • $\begingroup$ Maybe you expend energy lifting your center of gravity and then release it (fall back) without recovering it causing a net expendeture. I can account for this in my balance by adding higher-order-terms to it. $\endgroup$ Dec 6, 2010 at 18:17
  • $\begingroup$ Well, yes, but you can take that argument to the infinitesimal limit and recover a inertial frame for both cases. Check my answer for an argument based on the kinematics relative the ground as seen in the runner's frame of reference. $\endgroup$ Dec 6, 2010 at 20:35
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    $\begingroup$ To explain this within the framework you proposed: You need to add another term to your first equation (expend energy to push down the treadmill). At first, you might think that you're not pushing down the treadmill (it's supposed to roll back on its own after all), but remember that if you weren't pushing it down than you wouldn't be sustained in place by it. $\endgroup$
    – Malabarba
    Dec 14, 2010 at 4:52
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What if the runner gets on her bicycle on the treadmill? Does she have to bike harder on an inclined treadmill than a horizontal one, both running at the same speed?

(In this case, biking on a horizontal treadmill is almost effortless because on a bike, the real effort is the wind resistance, which would be non-existent in this case.)

If the treadmill were turned off, and she stopped pedalling, she would start to accelerate backwards down the slope due to a component of her weight $mg$ acting down the hill, namely $m g \sin(\theta)$.

The feeling on the (running) inclined treadmill at angle $\theta$ would be the same as biking on the flat (again with no wind resistance), but with an elastic strap or spring exerting a backwards force on the bike (equivalent to the component $mg \sin(\theta)$ of her weight, contingent on the required angle of ascent). Unlike the case on the flat without the elastic, she now has to press harder on the pedals to do work applying the appropriate force at the point of contact of the driving wheel at the appropriate speed.

The arguments & conclusions for the bicycle carry over to the runner. But it is easier to imagine the situation for the bike, because it is less confused by the complicated motion of running.

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  • $\begingroup$ If someone is cycling on a flat moving treadmill, it feels nearly effortless because (disregarding transmission losses) to remain stationary they only have to overcome the rolling resistance between the wheel and the treadmill surface for the given speed. In the case of an inclined treadmill moving at the same speed, the rolling resistance is the same, so the effort required is also the same. $\endgroup$
    – z7sg
    Dec 6, 2021 at 13:47
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For sake of argument I will compare a climber maintaining constant speed up a hill and a treadmill runner. If the climber suddenly stopped spending any amount of energy climbing the hill, gravity will tug on him as $mg sin \theta$ while additionally, friction acts in the same direction to slow him down. If a person on the treadmill does the same thing, not only is $mg sin \theta$ pulling him down, so will the friction in the same direction. In both cases they are countering the work done by these two forces so that there is no net change in kinetic energy. Assuming climber maintained the same amount of velocity at which the treadmill runs over, the friction should be perfectly identical with the only difference being what is moving relative to what. Hence there would be no difference in the energy spent neglecting the air drag, of course.

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  • $\begingroup$ Note that the work done calculated maybe different since work done and change in kinetic energy are both frame dependent. In fact it is in the treadmill frame of reference that the energy calculated is same as a mountain climber. The symmetry of the problem is what ultimately ensures they spend same energy. $\endgroup$
    – 372191
    Feb 17, 2023 at 22:56

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