πŸŽ“ mecademyAI β€Ί General Physics 1 β€Ί Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics β€Ί Problem 101
Fundamentals of Physics Extended 12th Edition Β· Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics Β· Problem 101
βœ… Verified Step-by-Step πŸŽ“ Engineering Expert Reviewed πŸ“ LaTeX Math Rendering

Halliday, Resnick & Walker β€” Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics: Problem 101

Ice skating. A long-standing explanation of ice skating (Fig. 18.38) is that the ice is slippery beneath the skate because the weight of the skater creates sufficient stress (pressure) beneath the skate to melt the ice, thus lubricating the skate-ice contact area. At temperature \( T = -1^\circ\text{C} \), the pressure required to melt ice is \( 1.4 \times 10^7 \text{ N/m}^2 \). At that temperature, if a skater with weight \( F_g = 800 \text{ N} \) stands evenly on both skates, with each contact area \( A = 14.3 \text{ mm}^2 \), what is the stress \( \sigma \) beneath each skate? (The result appears to support the pressure-melting explanation of ice skating, but the catch is that this is a static calculation whereas ice skating involves moving skates, perhaps rapidly. More promising explanations involve friction melting of the ice by a skate, with the skate not contacting the ice but being supported by meltwater beneath it.)

πŸ“ Solution Approach

Given: . A

This problem covers key concepts in Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics from Fundamentals of Physics Extended 12th Edition by Halliday, Resnick & Walker. The step-by-step solution involves applying fundamental principles and systematic analysis to arrive at the correct answer. Full solution available with a Solution Pass.

πŸ“– View Solution

Step-by-step solution requires a Solution Pass

View Solution β†’
πŸ’‘ Problems 1–5 of each chapter are free with login

πŸ“˜ About This Textbook

Fundamentals of Physics Extended Β· 12th Edition
Author: Halliday, Resnick & Walker
Publisher: Wiley
Chapter: Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics