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-5.60 deg. 5.68 grams. 0.36+-.01 20 deg.+-30' -5.60 deg. "These experiments were repeated on another occasion with the same result and similar results had been obtained with different apparatus. "As a result of the investigation the following points are clearly shown:-- 282 "(1) The coefficient of friction for ice at constant temperature may have either of two constant values according to the pressure per unit surface of contact. "(2) For small pressures, and up to a certain well defined limit of pressure, the coefficient is fairly large, having the value 0.36+-.01 in the case investigated. "(3) For pressures greater than the above limit the coefficient is relatively small, having the value 0.17+-.01 in the case investigated." It will be seen that Morphy's results are similar to those arrived at in the first experimental consideration of our subject; but from the manner in which the experiments have been carried out, they are more accurate and reliable. A great deal more might be said about skating, and the allied sports of tobogganing, sleighing, curling, ice yachting, and last, but by no means least, sliding--that unpretentious pastime of the million. Happy the boy who has nails in his boots when Jack-Frost appears in his white garment, and congeals the neighbouring pond. But I must turn away at the threshold of the humorous aspect of my subject (for the victim of the street "slide" owes his injured dignity to the abstruse laws we have been discussing) and pass to other and graver subjects intimately connected with skating. James Thomson pointed out that if we apply compressional stress to an ice crystal contained in a vessel 283 which also contains other ice crystals, and water at 0 deg. C., then the stressed crystal will melt and become water, but its counterpart or equivalent quantity of ice will reappear elsewhere in the vessel. This is, obviously, but a deduction from the principles we have been examining. The phenomenon is commonly called "regelation." I have already made the usual regelation experiment before you when I compressed broken ice in this mould. The result was a clear, hard and almost flawless lens of ice. Now in this operation we must figure to ourselves the pieces of ice when pressed against one another melting away where compressed, and the water produced escaping into the spaces between the fragments, and there solidifying in virtue of its temperature
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