more rough surface more friction object have
As the surface area increases so does the friction.
Yes
Surface types can affect the force of friction because as the surface gets rough and rougher it has more friction and smooth surface has less friction. if we compare the affect of friction force on a ice and road. Road is much more rough than the ice chunk and if we slide a ice hockey puck on each of the surfaces, we get that smoother surfaces has less friction.
The force of friction on an object is equal to the coefficient of friction times the force perpendicular to the surface (normal force). When the mass of an object increases, the normal force increases, and the force of friction also increases. However, because the equation does not involve surface area, increasing surface area has no affect on the force of friction.
Yes greater the surface area coming into contact friction would increase
Water can make a flat surface more slippery, which will decrease the amount of friction
Yes
No, it doesn't, the only important thing is the force perpendicular to the surface (weight) and friction coefficient.
friction
the smoother a surface is, the less friction it produces.
the rougher the surface is, the more friction there will be
Surface types can affect the force of friction because as the surface gets rough and rougher it has more friction and smooth surface has less friction. if we compare the affect of friction force on a ice and road. Road is much more rough than the ice chunk and if we slide a ice hockey puck on each of the surfaces, we get that smoother surfaces has less friction.
The force of friction on an object is equal to the coefficient of friction times the force perpendicular to the surface (normal force). When the mass of an object increases, the normal force increases, and the force of friction also increases. However, because the equation does not involve surface area, increasing surface area has no affect on the force of friction.
Yes greater the surface area coming into contact friction would increase
answer it yourself ;)
surface friction and sliding friction
The nature of the surface. A measure of this is the coefficient of friction.
Water can make a flat surface more slippery, which will decrease the amount of friction