Topic
Ice Gliding
Episodes and research papers from From First Principles that help explain Ice Gliding from the ground up.
Research
Papers and studies featured by the show.
Nanorheology of interfacial water during ice gliding
Imagine you're trying to slide a tiny bead across an ice cube. Scientists always assumed the reason it slides easily is because a thin layer of regular water forms underneath it. These researchers built a super-sensitive machine to actually 'feel' that water layer with a tiny bead. They discovered it's not like normal water at all. Instead, it's a 'visco-elastic' fluid, meaning it's thick and gooey, almost like honey, but also springy. This gooey-but-springy nature is the real secret to ice's slipperiness. They also found that if you coat the bead with a water-repellent material, like wax on a ski, it makes this water layer less gooey, which surprisingly reduces friction even more.