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Ice skating



The Skater, 1782, a portrait of William Grant by Gilbert Stuart.
The Skater, 1782, a portrait of William Grant by Gilbert Stuart.

In the Netherlands, ice skating was considered proper for all classes of people to participate in, as shown in many pictures by the Old Masters. However, in other places, participation in ice skating was limited to members of the upper classes. Emperor Rudolf II of the Holy Roman Empire enjoyed ice skating so much he had a large ice carnival constructed in his court in 1610 in order to popularize the sport. James II of England came to the Netherlands in exile, and he fell for the sport. When he went back to England, this "new" sport was introduced to the British aristocracy. King Louis XVI of France brought ice skating to Paris during his reign. Madame de Pompadour, Napoleon I, Napoleon III, and the House of Stuart were, among others, royal and upper class fans of ice skating. It is said that Queen Victoria got to know her future husband, Prince Albert, better through a series of ice skating trips.

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How it works

Ice skating works because the metal blade at the bottom of the ice skate shoe can glide with very little friction over the surface of the ice. However, slightly leaning the blade over and digging one of its edges into the ice ("rockover and bite") gives skaters the ability to increase friction and control their movement at will. In addition, by choosing to move along curved paths while leaning their bodies radially and flexing their knees, skaters can use gravity to control and increase their momentum. They can also create momentum by pushing the blade against the curved track which it cuts into the ice. Skillfully combining these two actions of leaning and pushing— a technique known as "drawing"— results in what looks like effortless and graceful curvilinear flow across the ice.

Experiments show that ice has a minimum kinetic friction at −7°C (19°F), and many indoor skating rinks set their system to a similar temperature. The low amount of friction actually observed has been difficult for physicists to explain, especially at lower temperatures. On the surface of any body of ice at a temperature above about −20°C (−4°F), there is always a thin film of liquid water, ranging in thickness from only a few molecules to thousands of molecules. This is because an abrupt end to the crystalline structure is not the most entropically favorable possibility. The thickness of this liquid layer depends almost entirely on the temperature of the surface of the ice, with higher temperatures giving a thicker layer. However, skating is possible at temperatures much lower than −20°C, at which temperature there is no naturally occurring film of liquid.

When the blade of an ice skate passes over the ice, the ice undergoes two kinds of changes in its physical state: an increase in pressure, and a change in temperature due to kinetic friction and the heat of melting. Direct measurements[3] show that the heating due to friction is greater than the cooling due to the heat of melting. Although high pressure can cause ice to melt, by lowering its melting point, the pressure required is far greater than that actually produced by ice skates. Frictional heating does lead to an increase in the thickness of the naturally occurring film of liquid, but measurements with an atomic force microscope have found the boundary layer to be too thin to supply the observed reduction in friction.

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Dangers

The first main danger in ice skating is falling on the ice, which is dependent on the quality of the ice surface, the design of the ice skate, and the skill and experience of the skater. While serious injury is rare, a number of (short track) skaters have been paralyzed after a fall when they hit the boarding. An additional danger of falling is injury caused by the skater's own metal blades or those of other skaters. Falling can be fatal to those who forget their helmets.

The second and more serious danger is the chance of falling through the ice into the freezing water underneath when skating outdoors on a frozen body of water. This can lead to serious injury or death due to shock, hypothermia or drowning. It is often difficult or impossible for skaters to climb out of the water back onto the ice due to the ice repeatedly breaking, the skater being weighed down by skates and thick winter clothing, or the skater becoming disoriented under water.

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Sports based on ice skating

A number of sports are played while ice skating:

  • Ice hockey is a team sport played on ice, where the objective of the game is to score goals by shooting a puck into the opponent's goal using a long stick with a blade that is commonly curved to accommodate the shooter's handedness.
  • Bandy is a team sport played on ice, with sticks, a small ball and rules similar to those of field hockey.
  • Figure skating is a sport in which individuals, synchronized skating (groug skating) ,mixed couples, or groups perform spins, jumps, and other moves on ice, artistically to music. It is also the worlds fastest growing sport!
  • Ringette is a team sport played on ice, where the objective of the game is to score goals by shooting a ring into the opponent's goal using a long bladeless stick.
  • Speed skating is a sport in which the competitors attempt to travel a certain distance as quickly as possible on skates.
  • Tour skating is a recreational activity where participants travel long distances by ice skating on natural ice.

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Communal games on ice

A number of recreational activity games can be played on ice.

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Synthetic "ice"

In recent years, a new surface made of plastic has been commercialised. Sheets of interconnected polyethylene panels covered with a thin film of grease allow skating with the same blades used for ice skating.[2]

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References

  1. ^ van Voorbergen, Bert. The virtual ice Skates museum - Ice skates and their history (1). Retrieved on 2006-09-18.[1]
  2. ^ The first humans travelling on ice: an energy-saving strategy?.
  3. ^ Colbeck et al., American Journal of Physics. vol. 65, no. 6; June 1997; p.488-92; abstract at http://www.skridsko.net/klubbar/data/science.html

Formenti F. and Minetti A.E. (2007) Human locomotion on ice: the evolution of ice skating energetics through history

Formenti F. and Minetti A.E. (2008) The first humans travelling on ice: an energy saving strategy?

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External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Look up ice skating in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.



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