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Sliding Friction If you push hard enough on the cardboard box filled with books, it will start sliding. If you stop pushing after the box starts sliding, it will slow down and stop. The force that acted on the box to slow it down was sliding friction. Sliding friction is the force that opposes the motion of two sliding surfaces in contact. Sliding friction exists between all sliding surfaces that are touching, such as the surfaces of the moving parts in a car's engine.
it is usually greater than static friction
Nothing
There are four types of friction: Fluid Friction (The friction caused by falling through air or water, or any other liquid etc), rolling friction (Like a ball rolling across the floor), static friction (The force it takes to begin something's movement), and sliding friction(Like pushing a box across the floor). In order of strongest to weakest it's Static, Sliding, Rolling, Fluid.
It requires more force to start an object than to keep it sliding because you need a strong push to slide the box and once the box starts sliding, the friction of the floor acts between the floor and the bottom surface of the box
Sliding Friction If you push hard enough on the cardboard box filled with books, it will start sliding. If you stop pushing after the box starts sliding, it will slow down and stop. The force that acted on the box to slow it down was sliding friction. Sliding friction is the force that opposes the motion of two sliding surfaces in contact. Sliding friction exists between all sliding surfaces that are touching, such as the surfaces of the moving parts in a car's engine.
Examples of SLIDING FRICTION is pushing a heavy rock in your path, or moving a box on the floor.
it is usually greater than static friction
As you push a cereal box across a tabletop, the sliding friction acting on the cereal box acts in the direction opposite of motion.
Nothing
static friction
There are four types of friction: Fluid Friction (The friction caused by falling through air or water, or any other liquid etc), rolling friction (Like a ball rolling across the floor), static friction (The force it takes to begin something's movement), and sliding friction(Like pushing a box across the floor). In order of strongest to weakest it's Static, Sliding, Rolling, Fluid.
It requires more force to start an object than to keep it sliding because you need a strong push to slide the box and once the box starts sliding, the friction of the floor acts between the floor and the bottom surface of the box
The force that keeps a box from sliding down an angled conveyor belt that slopes upward is the friction
it has to do with gravity, weight, friction, torque, and force..... simply put your lateral force (pushing from the side) has to exceed the friction caused by the box and the surface its on
Sliding friction is the force impeding movement as a result of two surfaces rubbing against one another. Imagine pushing a cardboard box of books across a concrete garage floor. Rolling friction refers to the frictional forces between a rolling tire and the pavement. The tire gets warm and an inflated tire rolls easier. The sliding friction is much more difficult to overcome than rolling friction.
Hey! I'm an 8th grade student, but I know the answer! Static friction is the stronger force. When you push on the box, the static friction increases to match your force when you push the box. However, when you go above the limit on the static friction of the box, sliding friction happens. Sliding friction is less than the static friction because it doesn't match your force or else static friction would come into play again. Hope this helps because I'm doing a report on this now!Use round objects, like metal pipes, to roll the washer across the floor. B. Put a lubricant between the surface of the floor and the washing machine.