Your American History Reference Guide!
- Jerk

HistoryMania Information Site on Jerk American History American History Search        American History Browse welcome to our free resource site for all enthusiasts!

Jerk

"Jerk" (as in "clean and jerk") is also a weightlifting term; "jerk" also describes Jamaican jerk spice; "Jerk" is also an Australian Music Bands name

In slang, the term "jerk" can be used to describe a foolish, rude, or contemptible person (for example, Jeff Hammit breaks up with his very cute girlfriend because she "did not have a supermodel body." He is considered to be a "jerk.") This word was originated with the "jerkwater" towns of mid 19th century America, the pit stops the old steam engine trains needed to make to "jerk" water to the train, to bring it from the river to the train. The term "jerkwater" came to represent any small, remote town. The term "jerk" was then derived from these towns to represent inferior, unimportant people.

Also in slang, jerk is a euphemism for masturbation.


In physics, jerk (in British English, jolt), also called surge, is the derivative of acceleration with respect to time (or the third derivative of displacement). Yank is mass times jerk, or equivalently, the derivative of force with respect to time. Jerk is a vector, and there is no generally used term to describe its scalar value.

The units of jerk are metres per second cubed (m/s3). There is no universal agreement on the symbol for jerk, but j is commonly used.

Jerk is used at times in engineering, especially when building roller coasters. Some precision or fragile objects—such as passengers, who need time to sense stress changes and adjust their muscle tension, or suffer e.g. whiplash—can be safely subjected not only to a maximum acceleration, but also to a maximum jerk. Jerk may be considered when the excitation of vibrations is a concern.

Higher derivatives of displacement than jerk also exist, but they are rarely necessary, and hence lack agreed names. Many suggestions have been made, such as jilt, jouse and jolt. In development of the Hubble Space Telescope's pointing control system, the fourth derivative of position was considered and the engineers used the word jounce in their publications.

External links

The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the
GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy
Search | Browse | Contact | Legal info