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Factors Influencing Air Density are: Altitude, Air Temperature, Air Humidity and Barometric Pressure. Calculator: http://barani.biz/apps/air-density/

How does riding at different air densities affect Power Output and Speed?

3 Answers 3

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Just coming back to this question as there are a few considerations.

The OP only mentioned (barometric) air pressure and not necessarily altitude. I'll start with barometric pressure only and come back to impact of altitude.

Typical barometric pressure variations at the same altitude, and hence impact on the partial pressure of oxygen (O2), are not so big as to be noticeable to one's ability to generate power, however they are sufficient to impact the speed one can attain for a given power output. It may not be all that noticeable in general riding about town, but time trial riders will be able to achieve faster or slower times depending on the barometric pressure.

A 10% variation in air pressure at the same altitude won't happen. e.g. the difference between very low pressure day (e.g. a category 2 to 3 cyclone with central low pressure zone @ 970 hPa) and very high pressure (e.g. fine day @ 1030 hPa) is only 6%.

Since you are unlikely to ride in a hurricane or cyclone, the fluctuations in barometric pressure for conditions you will actually ride in are typically only a couple of percent. Even so, for a time trial racer, over a 40km course the difference in air density between low and high pressure days can result in a 30 seconds difference in time on course, all other things being equal.

Air density can vary by more than that due to changes in barometric pressure alone. Air density is primarily a function of barometric pressure, air temperature and altitude.

Air density increases with increases in barometric pressure, and it reduces with increases in temperature and altitude. Humidity has a very small (negligible) impact on air density but for the sake of completeness, increasing humidity reduces air density a little.

Impact of Altitude on Performance

If we consider the impact of altitude on cycling performance, as others have said there are two primary factors:

i. the physiological impact to your ability to generate sustainable power as the partial pressure of O2 reduces with increasing altitude, and

ii. the physics impact as air density reduces, meaning one can attain a higher speed for the same power output (ceteris paribus).

The physiological impact

As we climb to higher altitudes and air density drops, the "thinner" air means a reduction in the partial pressure of oxygen, which negatively impacts the power output we can sustain via aerobic metabolism. That loss of power can be as much as 20% or more depending on how high we go, and our individual response to altitude.

There have been a few published papers examining the impact of altitude on aerobic athletic performance and from these formulas to estimate the loss of power as a function of altitude have been developed. There was one from the 1989 paper by Peronnet et al, two from the 1999 paper by Bassett et al, one each for acclimated and non-acclimated athletes. Adding to those, I have generated a fourth formula, based on the 2007 study by Clark et al. The relevant papers are:

Péronnet F, Bouissou P, Perrault H, Ricci J.: A comparison of cyclists' time records according to altitude and materials used.

Bassett DR Jr, Kyle CR, Passfield L, Broker JP, Burke ER.: Comparing cycling world hour records, 1967-1996: modelling with empirical data.

Clark SA, Bourdon PC, Schmidt W, Singh B, Cable G, Onus KJ, Woolford SM, Stanef T, Gore CJ, Aughey RJ.: The effect of acute simulated moderate altitude on power, performance and pacing strategies in well-trained cyclists.

Peronnet et al used empirical data from actual world cycling hour records to estimate the impact of altitude on an elite cyclist's power output. The assumptions used in estimating altitude induced power loss may have some error; in particular due to methods used to estimate the power for each rider as neither the power nor coefficient of aerodynamic drag was actually measured.

According to the old Wattage forum FAQ item by Dr David Bassett, Jr, the two Bassett et al formula were derived from earlier papers examining altitude impact on aerobic performance of four groups of highly trained or elite runners. So while these formulas were not derived from cyclists we can still generalise from those to the loss of aerobic capacity for cyclists.

Finally, the study by Clark et al measured the impact on peak oxygen utilisation (VO2), gross efficiency and cycling power output on ten well trained but non-altitude acclimated cyclists and triathletes by testing riders at simulated altitudes of 200, 1200, 2200 and 3200 metres. They examined a number of factors, including maximal 5-minute power output, VO2 and gross efficiency relative to performance at 200 metres, as well as sub-maximal VO2 and gross efficiency.

I used these data to generate a formula similar to those from Peronnet et al and Bassett et al (which make up the numbers in the table listed in one of the other answers). Of course there is an assumption of an equivalent reduction in 1-hour power as for 5-minute power. Clark et al noted slightly greater reductions in VO2 peak than for 5-minute maximal power, and no change in gross efficiency at 5-min max power with altitude. So there is some anaerobic metabolic contribution presumably making up the difference. There was some loss of sub-maximal efficiency noted at a simulated 3200 metres.

I chose in this instance to use the reduction in 5-minute power rather than fall in VO2 peak as the base data for the formula, and applied an adjustment to offset the formula for sea-level equivalency to bring it into line with the formula by Peronnet et al and Bassett et al. Of course when you look at the reported data there are of course sizeable variations within the test group at each simulated altitude, so the formula is based on group averages for each simulated altitude.

Here are the formulas:

x = kilometres above sea level:

Peronnet et al:
Proportion of sea level power = -0.003x^3 + 0.0081x^2 - 0.0381x + 1

Bassett et al Altitude-acclimatised athletes (several weeks at altitude): Proportion of sea level power = -0.0112 x^2 – 0.0190x + 1 R^2 = 0.973

Bassett et al Non altitude-acclimatised athletes (1-7 days at altitude): Proportion of sea level power = 0.00178x^3 – 0.0143x^2 – 0.0407x + 1 R^2 = 0.974

Simmons’ formula based on Clark et al: Proportion of sea level power = -0.0092x^2 – 0.0323x + 1 R^2 = 0.993

and in chart form they look as follows:

enter image description here

Now keep in mind these are averages for the samples used in each study and individual variation exists, so the impact to any individual will be in this range but could be more or less.

The physics impact

Now of course from a performance perspective, you lose power output as altitude increases, however there is a performance gain as the lower air density means you can travel at a higher speed for the same power output (and aerodynamics).

The physics is fairly straightforward and unlike the physiological impact it applies equally to everyone. As an example I examined the influence of altitude on the physics of cycling’s world hour record, and showed how the reduction in air density as altitude increases means one can travel faster for the same power output, or put another way, the power demand reduces at any given speed as altitude increases.

That resulted in this chart, which shows the relationship in power to aerodynamic drag ratio (W/m^2) and altitude for speeds ranging from 47km/h up to Chris Boardman's 56.375km/h record.

enter image description here

In essence, as altitude increases, the power to aerodynamic drag ratio reduces for the same speed.

The net impact of both the physiological and physics impacts

Well when we combine the two, this is the result:

enter image description here

This should be reasonably straightforward to interpret, but even so I'll provide some explanation.

The horizontal axis is altitude and the dark vertical lines represent the altitude of various tracks around the world.

The vertical axis is the proportion of sea level speed attainable.

The curved coloured lines represent the combined impact of both a reduction in power using each of the formula highlighted above, combined with the reduction in air density enabling greater speeds for same power.

So for example, if we look at the green line (Basset et al acclimated), this shows that as a cyclist increases altitude, they are capable of sustaining a higher speed up until around 2,900 metres, and any further increase in altitude shows a decline in the speed attainable, as the power losses begin to outweigh the reduction in air density.

The track in Aigle Switerland represents around a 1% speed gain over London, while riding at Aguascalientes would provide for between a 2.5% to 4% gain in speed. Head to Mexico City and you might gain a little more, but as the chart shows, the curves begin to flatten out, and so the risk v reward balance tips more towards the riskier end of the spectrum.

Altitude therefore represents a case of good gains but diminishing returns as the air gets rarer. Once you head above 2,000 metres, the speed gains begin to taper off, and eventually they start to reduce, meaning there is a "sweet spot" altitude.

Caveats, and there are a few but the most important are:

  • any individual's sweet spot altitude will depend on their individual response to altitude

  • the plotted lines represent averages for the athletic groups studied;

  • the formula used have a limited domain of validity, while the plotted lines extend beyond that;

  • these are not the only performance factors to consider, but are two of the most important.

I suspect that the drop off in performance with altitude might occur a little more sharply for many than is suggested here. Nevertheless, the same principles apply even if your personal response to altitude is on the lower end of the range, and it is hard to imagine why anyone would suggest that heading to at least a moderate altitude track is a bad idea from a performance perspective.

If you want to read some more, I cover these issues in three blogs items here:

http://alex-cycle.blogspot.com.au/2014/09/wm2-altitude-and-hour-record.html

http://alex-cycle.blogspot.com.au/2014/12/wm2-altitude-and-hour-record-part-ii.html

http://alex-cycle.blogspot.com.au/2015/06/wm2-altitude-and-hour-record-part-iii.html

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  • Mmm sweet graphs! Supporting information is much appreciated.
    – Criggie
    Oct 13, 2016 at 8:47
  • I've edited the somewhat miserable question to better suit this answer. Thanks for your efforts!
    – AzulShiva
    Oct 14, 2016 at 16:41
  • No problem. Not sure about editing someone's question to that extent though (except in the sense of making it easier to search for such information). Sometimes questions might seem poor but represent a good chance to correct some misconceptions, and my response was structured to deal with that. Now my response looks out of context. Perhaps it might have been better to have left the OP's original text there for context and top/tailed it with clarification comments instead. Oct 14, 2016 at 20:12
  • It was my own question :) I have corrected it because this is about air density not air pressure. And I have summarized several stray questions into one. Yes, parts of your response look out of context but only because I didn't seem to figure the difference between pressure and density and the previous question really felt like I had no idea what I was actually asking. Feel free to edit it further, I'm sure you will do a better job than I.
    – AzulShiva
    Oct 15, 2016 at 17:11
  • I had reason to be looking at recent studies, and noted this one: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27710149 showed 12 endurance trained male cyclists experienced an average 10.5% drop in power from sea level to simulated 2000m altitude while riding at sub-maximal intensity of 70% relative VO2max with same blood lactate levels, perceived exertion and HR. 10.5% loss of power at 2000m is bang in the middle of the range in the top chart, right in line with the data of Clarke et al and plotted in the formula I derived from that study (the purple line). Oct 18, 2016 at 1:49
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The following chart can be found in an interesting article on Training Peaks blog. From this you should be able to adjust your power level occordingly.

Power vs Altitude

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  • Can you tell us what peronnett and bassett mean? Are they different test results or something? Also, its curious that the acclimated column starts at 99.90% where non-acclimated starts at 100%.
    – Criggie
    Jul 1, 2016 at 9:24
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    Yes, Bassett and Peronnett both published scientific papers, each with a derived equation from their data. Both papers are referenced in the linked article. The 99.90% will be due to the curves produced by the equations. I doubt anyone will worry excessively over 0.1%FTP as it equates to less than 0.5W even for the worlds best riders
    – Andy P
    Jul 1, 2016 at 11:54
  • The non-zero at zero actually inspires more confidence in the model. I imagine training below sea level is possible only in the Netherlands, Death Valley, the Dead Sea, and some very few other locations around the globe. So riders would be acclimated to their normal elevation.
    – Criggie
    Jul 1, 2016 at 22:10
  • If it is altitude we're talking about, first we have to worry about altitude sickness, which is not a linear relation, but closer to a binary. Jul 3, 2016 at 2:11
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Power does go down as altitude increases. But the offset is air density decreases in parallel (to a point). And this is the reason why many hour records have been attempted at altitude. The optimum is apparently 3500m. Whereby the increase in speed outweighs the loss in power. Hence the popularity of the velodromes in La Paz (Bolivia) at 3400m and Mexico City velodrome at 2230m.

W/r to the notion of tyre pressure and rolling resistance - there was a recent article which debunked the myth about high tyre pressures - stating the loss in energy created by the vibrations of high tyre pressure meant lower tyre pressure was actually faster over "normal" road surfaces.

http://www.wolfgang-menn.de/altitude.htm

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    Aerodynamics is insignificant since I want to adjust my power. The question would be how much power to the riders put out when at 3400m. This is not an answer.
    – AzulShiva
    Jun 30, 2016 at 10:00
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    @AzulShiva In reviewing this answer I find find that it does address your question, although perhaps not in the way you expected. Since you are saying it's not an answer, perhaps you could edit your question to make it clearer what you're looking for. I see 4 questions marks, leading me to think it's too broad.
    – andy256
    Jun 30, 2016 at 10:36

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