VCE Physical Education Unit 3 AOS 2

VCE PE Unit 3, AoS 2: Interactive Study Guide

The Three Energy Systems

The body uses three distinct but integrated systems to resynthesise ATP. Each is suited to different demands of intensity and duration. Explore their unique characteristics below.

ATP-PC System

Immediate, explosive power.

  • Fuel: Phosphocreatine (PC)
  • Rate: Explosive
  • Yield: Very Small (~0.7 ATP)
  • Dominance: 0-10 sec

Anaerobic Glycolysis

Sustained high-intensity.

  • Fuel: Glycogen (CHO)
  • Rate: Fast
  • Yield: Small (2-3 ATP)
  • Dominance: 10-75 sec

Aerobic System

Endurance engine.

  • Fuel: Glycogen, Fats
  • Rate: Slow
  • Yield: Very Large (38+ ATP)
  • Dominance: >75 sec

System Comparison: Rate vs. Yield

A core principle is the inverse relationship between how *fast* a system produces ATP (rate) and how *much* it can produce in total (yield).

Energy System Interplay

The energy systems are always working together, with one being ‘predominant’ depending on activity intensity and duration. This is the energy continuum.

The Energy Continuum

Use the slider to see how the relative contribution of each system changes as the duration of a maximal-effort activity increases.

1 sec ~90 secs 3+ mins

At 10 seconds…

The ATP-PC system is dominant, providing explosive power. The Anaerobic Glycolysis system is rapidly increasing its contribution.

Acute Physiological Responses

When we start exercising, our body makes immediate adjustments to meet the increased demand for oxygen and energy. Explore the key responses below.

Cardiovascular & Respiratory Responses: Trained vs. Untrained

Chronic training leads to significant physiological adaptations. This chart compares the acute responses of a trained athlete versus an untrained individual.

Heart Rate (HR)

Heart rate increases linearly with intensity. The trained athlete has a lower resting HR and maintains a lower HR at any given sub-maximal workload, demonstrating greater cardiac efficiency.

Oxygen Dynamics

The body’s oxygen consumption ($VO_2$) follows a dynamic pattern during exercise and recovery, involving three phases: oxygen deficit, steady state, and EPOC.

Oxygen Consumption: Deficit & EPOC

This chart illustrates the body’s oxygen usage during the transition from rest to exercise and back to rest.

Oxygen Deficit: The initial period where anaerobic systems cover the energy demand while the aerobic system ramps up. EPOC: After exercise, oxygen consumption remains elevated to “repay the debt” and restore the body to its resting state.

Fatigue & Lactate Inflection Point

Fatigue is an inability to continue at a given intensity. LIP is the point where lactate production exceeds clearance, a key predictor of endurance performance.

Lactate Inflection Point (LIP)

A higher LIP is a key indicator of endurance performance. Training shifts the LIP to the right, allowing an athlete to maintain a higher intensity before fatigue-inducing by-products accumulate rapidly.

Recovery Strategies

Effective recovery must target the specific cause of fatigue. Click on a “Cause of Fatigue” to see its optimal recovery method.

Matching Fatigue with Recovery

Cause of Fatigue

⚑️ PC Depletion

Limiting factor for the ATP-PC system (<10s).

πŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ H+ Ion Accumulation

From anaerobic glycolysis in high-intensity events (10-75s).

πŸ’¨ Glycogen Depletion

Key factor in endurance events (>90 mins).

Optimal Recovery

Passive Recovery

Rest or very light activity to rapidly replenish PC stores.

Active Recovery

Low-intensity exercise to clear H+ ions and lactate.

Nutritional Recovery

Consuming high-GI carbs and fluids to refuel and rehydrate.