- Friction has long been said to come in two forms ‘ static and dynamic. Two bodies held together by static friction do not move at all until the force shearing them apart passes a critical value.
- Our experiments show that this view is true only if one does not examine static friction with sufficient care. Our samples of ceramics on steel slide in reproducible ways ‘ if only by nanometers ‘ no matter how small the shearing forces.
![setup-v9](http://dev-center-nonlinear-dynamics.pantheonsite.io/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/setup-v9.jpg)
- The results can be explained by modifications of theories originally created to study the dynamic sliding of rock over rock. The same equations show that there should always be a little sliding even when forces are much smaller than the limit of static friction, and are in accord with experiments.
![RateState_07-04-4__2_Graph](http://dev-center-nonlinear-dynamics.pantheonsite.io/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/RateState_07-04-4__2_Graph.jpg)