Introduction
Tomlinson Movie
Macroscopic Friction
The law of Leonardo (da Vinci)
The law of Euler and Amontons
The law of Coulomb
Historical abstract
Asperities
Adhesion models
Friction Force Microscopy
Principle of measuring
Measuring Topology
Measuring Friction
Both Channels
Calibration
Dissipation
Self assessment
Tomlinson's mechanism
Phenomenology I
Phenomenology II
Mechanical adiabaticity
Distinguish positions
Playing Tomlinson
Friction - a pinning problem
2D Friction
Critical Curves
Historical Background
Research Projects
Simulator Applet
The first Picture
The Panels
Parameters
Post processing
Statistics
Glossary
Textbook
 

Macroscopic Friction

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In high school physics the phenomenon of friction is reduced to the classical friction laws of Leonardo da Vinci, Guillaume Amontons, Leonard Euler und Charles Coulomb. Leonardo da Vinci made experiments on an inclined plane. He found that friction is independent on the area of contact. Amontons did experiments on a horizontal surface and measured the friction force with a spring. He found that friction is proportional to the normal force and independent on the area of contact. He called the proportional factor friction constant. While Leonardo tested static friction Amontons dealt with kinetic friction. It was found by Leonhard Euler that one has to distinguish between static and kinetic friction, because it is not possible to cause a slow motion by slowly increasing the angle of an inclined plan. Also Coulomb looked at the phenomenon of friction. He built an experiment, which allowed to measure kinetic friction for different speeds. He found that friction is independent on the velocity.

The law of Leonardo appeard very paradox. Intuitively one would the friction force expect to be proportional to the area of contact. The paradoxon was resolved by F. P. Bowden and D. Tabor. They distinguished between the real area of contact and the geometric visible area of contact. The real area of contact is only a fraction of the visible area of contact. All experiments lead to the conclusion that friction is proportional to the real area of contact as intuitively expected.

 

Subsections:

The law of Leonardo (da Vinci)
The law of Euler and Amontons
The law of Coulomb
Historical abstract
Asperities
Adhesion models
  Introduction                  Friction Force Microscopy

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