Can be enhanced by photon tunneling. Usually, two bodies in relative motion feel friction when the respective surface atoms are in contact. In contrast, noncontact friction is similar to the van der Waals force, a common but weak attractive force that arises when an atom or molecule spontaneously develops an electric dipole moment due to a thermal or quantum fluctuation. The short-lived atomic polarity can induce a dipole moment in a neighboring atom or molecule some distance away. A new study of van der Waals friction by theorists Alexander Volokitin and Bo Persson of the Institute of Solid-State Research at Germany’s Research Center Jülich found that when surfaces are separated by about 1 nm, the van der Waals friction can be greatly enhanced in three ways. First, they found that the friction increases a 100-fold or more when two clean conducting surfaces move toward or away from each other rather...
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1 November 2003
November 01 2003
Citation
Phil F. Schewe; Noncontact friction. Physics Today 1 November 2003; 56 (11): 9. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2410009
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