Biomechanics is the investigation of how the frameworks and structures of natural living beings, from the littlest plants to the biggest creatures, respond to different powers and outer upgrades. In people, biomechanics frequently alludes to the investigation of how the skeletal and musculature frameworks work under various conditions. In biomechanics all the more for the most part, researchers regularly attempt to apply material science and other numerically based types of examination to find the cutoff points and capacities of organic frameworks. As it were, biomechanics has been around since the inquisitive antiquated Greek and Roman personalities started analyzing creatures and vivisecting people to find the internal frameworks of our bodies. A considerable lot of the extraordinary rationalists and researchers of our past took a stab at some type of biomechanics, from Aristotle, who composed On the Motion of Animals in the fourth century BC, to Leonardo da Vinci, who contemplated human muscle and joint capacity in fifteenth century Italy.