No, coefficient of friction is dependent on the materials in contact, not their mass. However the FORCE of friction will increase as the mass increases in this case.
The coefficient of static or kinetic friction depends on the surfaces that are causing friction. The formula for it is: force of friction over normal force.
Limiting friction is just the maximum static friction force (if you go over that point static friction becomes kinetic friction).Let f = frictional force,c = coefficient of frictionN = Normal forcefmax = cN = limiting frictionAlthough the term coefficient of limiting friction is not really used, I'd assume it would just be "c" (it's a coefficient after all). So they would be the same.If you meant is coefficient of friction the same as limiting friction, than the answer is no. Coefficient of friction is just the "c" in the equation. Limiting friction however is the product of the coefficient and the normal force.
there is no change.the coefficient of friction is independent of surface area.the matter will change only if normal reaction changes
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Place the object on the plane. Slowly increase the angle of the plane until the object begins to move at angle Θ. The µs = tan Θ. For µk, same process, but give the object a little push at each increasing value of Θ.
Use a surface that has a higher coefficient of static/kinetic friction and/or add more force downwards on the object.
The coefficient of kinetic friction between wool felt and aluminum is about 0.24 to 0.26.
coefficient kinetic
Ukn
static usully greater then kinetic
The coefficient of static or kinetic friction depends on the surfaces that are causing friction. The formula for it is: force of friction over normal force.
0.35, approximately
The coefficient of kinetic energy is a constant for friction acting as a retarding or dissipative force to calculate the total force on the object. The coefficient of friction u is represented in equation by the relation F = u*N, where N is the normal force.
static friction is higher in most cases, if you're talking about the coefficient of static or kinetic friction
The coefficient of static friction is always larger because it takes more initial force to move an object that is at rest.
It's hard to guess that in advance, though as a general rule you can guess that smooth surfaces have a lower coefficient of friction than rough surfaces, and lubrication usually reduces the friction. However, to get more precise information, this has to be measured. Of course, you can first search the Internet - somebody may already have measured it.
The rougher a surface is, the higher the coefficient of static and kinetic friction will be.