Slick

today’s fable of why ice is slippery

When the rubber hits the road … it takes hold. Good tires grip, which is to say they have a lot of friction against pavement. Liquids, less so; that which flows has less friction than solids.

Oil, for instance, can make a surface slick. So can rain. That’s important since ice can’t take much pressure. It melts.

When it’s stone-cold out, ice is like pavement and it can be too cold to skate. Usually though, standing on ice turns a thin layer into water—and water is slick, like oil on a highway.

So walking on ice is walking on water, without the sinking part. That’s why ice can turn a sidewalk into a slide-walk. It’s slippery when wet.

About Me

Roger Kenyon was North America’s first lay canon lawyer and associate director at the Archdiocese of Seattle. He was involved in tech (author of Macintosh Introductory Programming, Mainstay) before teaching (author of ThinkLink: a learner-active program, Riverwood). Roger lives near Toronto and offers free critical thinking and character development courses online.

“When not writing, I’m riding—eBike, motorbike, and a mow cart that catches air down the hills. One day I’ll have Goldies again.”