This MCQ module is based on: Contact Forces and Friction
Contact Forces and Friction
Recap and Set-up
In Part 1, we saw that a force is a push or pull, measured in newton (N). In real life, forces show up in many forms. Scientists group them into two big families depending on whether the two objects must actually touch or not: contact forces and non-contact forces. This part explores contact forces in detail.
5.3 Contact Forces
A contact force is a force that one object applies on another only while the two are in physical contact. Pushing a table, pulling a rope, kicking a ball — these all need touch. Two important contact forces in our daily life are muscular force and friction.
5.3.1 Muscular Force
Our muscles contract and relax to pull on bones. This internal pull lets us push doors, lift bags, pedal bicycles, write in our notebooks, and kick footballs. The force our muscles produce is called muscular force. Animals also use muscular force — a bullock pulling a plough, a horse pulling a carriage, a mule carrying loads up a hillside.
5.3.2 Friction — The Force That Resists Motion
Roll a marble on a smooth tiled floor. It rolls for a while and then stops — even though nothing blocks its path. Why does it stop? A hidden force is opposing its motion. This force is called friction.
Friction arises because no surface is perfectly smooth. Even glass, when seen under a microscope, has tiny bumps and valleys. When two surfaces slide over each other, their microscopic bumps catch on each other and resist the motion.
- Place the same hard-cover book on a polished tile floor. Push it with your finger and feel how easily it slides.
- Now place the book on a thick carpet or rug. Push with the same finger.
- Finally, place the book on a sheet of sand-paper. Try again.
Types of Friction
Not all friction behaves the same way. Depending on whether an object is still, sliding, or rolling, scientists name three types:
Did you know? Ancient Egyptians and Indians discovered very early that logs placed under heavy stones reduced friction from sliding to rolling. This trick let them move enormous stone blocks to build pyramids and temples. The modern version is the ball bearing inside every fan, bicycle, and car wheel.
5.4 Friction — Friend and Foe
Friction is sometimes a helpful friend and sometimes a troublesome foe. The same force that lets us walk also wastes energy in machines.
Friction as a Friend (Useful Friction)
- Walking: We grip the ground with our feet. Without friction (think of a frozen pond), we slip!
- Holding things: Friction between your fingers and a pencil lets you write. A soapy wet pen slips out of your hand.
- Braking: Friction between brake pads and wheels stops cycles, cars, and trains safely.
- Striking a match: Friction between the match head and the rough strip on the matchbox creates heat, igniting the chemical.
- Writing: Friction between pen tip and paper deposits ink. On a plastic sheet, ink rolls off.
Friction as a Foe (Harmful Friction)
- Wear and tear: Shoes, tyres, pencil nibs, and machine parts slowly wear out because of friction.
- Wasted energy: A lot of the fuel burned by a vehicle is lost as heat in moving parts.
- Heating of machines: Machines get hot and sometimes damaged; we add oil and fans to keep them cool.
- Slower motion: Friction slows down objects, so more fuel or force is needed to keep them moving.
Reducing and Increasing Friction
Because friction can be useful or harmful, we sometimes want more of it and sometimes less.
| How to REDUCE friction | How to INCREASE friction |
|---|---|
| Polish surfaces smooth | Make surfaces rough (sandpaper, knurling) |
| Apply lubricants — oil, grease, graphite powder | Use rubber grips on handles |
| Use ball bearings / wheels instead of sliding | Use tyres with deep treads for road grip |
| Streamline shape to reduce fluid drag | Spread rugs/mats on slippery floors |
| Float on air/water cushion (hovercraft) | Sprinkle sand on icy roads |
5.5 Fluid Friction (Drag)
Not only solid surfaces cause friction. Liquids and gases — which together we call fluids — also resist motion through them. This type of friction is called fluid friction or drag.
Try pushing your hand through water in a bucket — you feel resistance. Stick your hand out of a moving car's window — the air pushes back. Fish, dolphins, airplanes, bullet trains, and racing cars face the same challenge.
Streamlined Shapes
To reduce drag, nature and engineers give moving objects a streamlined shape — pointed at the front, tapered at the back. Fish have it, birds have it, airplanes have it, and so do bullet trains and sports cars.
Sometimes, though, we want drag. A parachute opens into a wide canopy to catch lots of air and slow down a falling skydiver safely.
🎯 Match It — Reduce or Increase Friction? L3 Apply
Click each scenario to reveal whether we want to reduce or increase friction.
📋 Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L2 Understand Why are smooth tyres dangerous on a wet road?
Q2. L3 Apply The mechanic says, "Oil reduces friction inside the engine." Is this good or bad for the engine?
Q3. L1 Remember Arrange these types of friction in decreasing order: rolling, static, sliding.
Q4. L4 Analyse A coin dropped into honey falls slowly but the same coin falls quickly through air. Explain.
Q5. L5 Evaluate A student says, "Friction should be removed completely from all machines so they run forever." Evaluate this claim.
🔗 Assertion–Reason Questions
Assertion (A): It is easier to drag a heavy box on wheels than to slide it on the floor.
Reason (R): Rolling friction is less than sliding friction.
Assertion (A): Aeroplanes and bullet trains have streamlined bodies.
Reason (R): Streamlined shapes reduce fluid friction (drag) and save fuel.
Assertion (A): Walking on a highly polished marble floor is difficult.
Reason (R): Polished surfaces have very low friction.