Im doing a CO2 dragster thingy at skool and i cant find the answer. i couldn't actually care less but i have to find out :-)
Everyone's asking this. I'm pretty sure its fluid. Your over a water that fluid. Sliding friction, technically no because fluid is more specific. Static, why would you consider that. If you're surfing assume that water is moving so, yeah. And rolling. We'll you don't have wheels on your surfboard do you?
Friction does affect the human body, for example when rubbing against rough surfaces can cause skin irritation or blisters. However, the body has adapted mechanisms, such as calluses and skin thickness, to minimize the effects of friction. Additionally, the body produces lubricants like sweat to help reduce friction between surfaces, such as between skin and clothing.
Scraping your knees creates friction between the skin and the surface you are in contact with. This friction generates heat and can damage the outer layer of the skin, leading to pain, inflammation, and the risk of infection.
I this its the following: Bursae - located between skin and bones, tendons and bones, muscles and bones, or ligaments and bones - Main function: reduce friction between joints Joint Capsule - surrounds a synovial joint and encloses the synovial cavity - Main function: unite the articulating bones and reduce friction via production of synovial fluid
The types of friction include static friction (prevents objects from moving), kinetic friction (opposes motion of objects sliding past each other), and rolling friction (resists the motion of objects rolling across a surface).
There is 'skin friction' also know as drag. There is also lubricated friction.
A blister is a small pocket beneath the skin filled with a clear fluid called serum or plasma that is caused by friction, burns, etc. A splinter is any foreign body that becomes embedded in the skin, however, the term "splinter" usually refers to a small shard of wood that becomes accidentally stuck in the skin.
A bursa is a sac filled with fluid to protect the tendons (plural bursae).A bursa is an expansion of synovial membrane that is found at sites of potential friction, ie. between your Achilles tendon and your calcaneus (heel bone).Bursae are lubricated on their inner walls by synovial fluid. By rolling between two structures, bursae keep friction to a minimum and prevent damage.
It actually means this. small bubble on the skin.
Everyone's asking this. I'm pretty sure its fluid. Your over a water that fluid. Sliding friction, technically no because fluid is more specific. Static, why would you consider that. If you're surfing assume that water is moving so, yeah. And rolling. We'll you don't have wheels on your surfboard do you?
vesicle is a raised skin lesion that contain serous fluid. this serous fluid may contain traces of blood or pus. while pustules are raised skin lesion that contain only pus.
A blister is a small bubble between layers of skin which contains watery or bloody fluid and is caused by friction and pressure, burning, freezing, chemical irritation, disease or infection.
A blister is caused by forceful rubbing a.k.a. friction, burns, freezing, or infection in the upper layers of the skin. The fluid "plasma" which builds up under the damaged layer of skin acts as a barrier between the damaged skin and the new skin that is being produced.
A blister may form when the skin has been damaged by friction or rubbing, heat, cold or chemical exposure. Fluid collects between the epidermis-the upper layer of the skin-and the layers below. This fluid cushions the tissue underneath, protecting it from further damage and allowing it to heal.
When you swim, your skin and the water connect and rub, even if if it doesn't feel like it, as you glide through the water. Seeing as friction is defined as "the rubbing of the surface of one body against that of another," it is a perfect example of fluid friction.
it is a skin of friction. TROLOLOLOLO
Resistance to the motion of an object is friction. Several different kinds of friction exist, including dry, fluid, lubricated, skin, and internal.