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The friction of snow

Zusammenfassung der Berichte zur Schneereibung von Colbeck und weiteren Autoren, u.a. Snow friction results from a mixture of processes. With little meltwater present, the surfaces are partially separated and, when too much water is present, the contact area increases and there may be capillary attachments. Slider thermal conductivity and even colour are very important. Heat is generated by friction and solar radiation absorbtion and is conducted away by both slider and ice paticles. The remaining heat is available to generate meltwater which acts as a lubricant. While sliders must be designed for use over a narrow range of snow and whether conditions, polyethylene bases can be structured and waxed to broaden that range. The important processes operate not at the air temperature, but at the ski base temperature, which is highly dependent on such things as snow-surface temperature, load and speed. The roughness elements and contact areas must be characterized before the basic processes can be understood further.
© Copyright 2004 The Engineering of Sport 5, Volume 1. Published by International Sports Engineering Association. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:endurance sports strength and speed sports technical and natural sciences
Tagging:Schnee
Published in:The Engineering of Sport 5, Volume 1
Language:English
Published: Sheffield International Sports Engineering Association 2004
Pages:13-20
Document types:book
Level:advanced