yes i would say it does cause when rubber is warmed up it will be a bit more sticky so i would leave my answer at cold
Not a scientific answer, but an intuitive one: I would imagine cold ice. Cold ice tends to be harder and slicker IMHO while warm ice tends to play slower and have more drag.
jdbndbjuwehhew
Ice has a much smoother surface than the surface of the ground, therefore there is less friction acting on the hockey puck compared to a ball rolling on the ground. Ice is nearly a frictionless surface.
no limiting friction is not less than rolling friction
rolling friction is 1/100 less than spliding friction
No.
Rolling friction generates considerably less heat than sliding friction. .
It is the force of friction exerted on an object which is rolling on the floor ;Example:wheels. It is less than the other types of friction.
due to the less surface area rolling friction is lesser than sliding friction
Here's the trick. Rolling friction is static friction. Sliding, or kinetic, friction is another thing, but when an object rolls without slipping, the point touching the ground at any instant is not moving at all, and so is subject to static friction.
Yes. Measure it.
Because when an object is sliding on the other the molecules donnot get time to inter lock properly
When we roll a barrel on the road, rolling friction acts in the direction opposite to the direction of rolling. In case of pulling, kinetic friction acts opposite to the direction in which the barrel moves. The coefficient of rolling friction is almost always less than the coefficient of kinetic friction. So therefore, in layman's terms, rolling friction is less than kinetic friction, therefore less resistance is faced by the barrel while rolling.
Rolling friction is the force of friction between two surfaces when one surface rolls over another.Sliding friction is the force of friction between two surfaces when one surface is moving on another.