yes; wherever the coaster touches the tracks there is static friction pressing against it and it pressing against the tracks, thus keeping it from flying off.
Static friction is where the roller coaster touches the tracks.
Yes
Gravity and Friction
liquid
Upside down.
Thermal energy is heat. Heat is associated with motion (like a roller coaster) because of friction. Friction slows down the speed of an object and changes some of its kinetic energy into heat.
a roller coaster that's made from wood of course duhhhhhhh..... sike naw im just kidding a wooden roller coaster conducts more heat than a steel roller coaster because it has more rough edges and that creates more friction and that makes heat. o a wooden roller coaster conductes more heat than a steel roller coaster does.
Friction, slows the roller coaster down to a slow enough pace that it eventually stops.
the two forces are friction and gravity
Kinetic Energy.
Kinetic or centrifugal, depening what phase you are on.
A roller coaster has 6 wheels, the front wheel, the friction wheel, the side wheel, the drag wheel, the liniod wheel, and the break wheel.
centripital motion, gravity, friction, ect.
between the wheels of the car and the track