Text
The Engineering Approach to Winter Sports
The Engineering Approach to Winter Sports presents the state-of-the-art research in the field of winter sports in a harmonized and comprehensive way for a diverse audience of engineers, equipment and facilities designers, and materials scientists. The book examines the physics and chemistry of snow and ice with particular focus on the interaction (friction) between sports equipment and snow/ice, how it is influenced by environmental factors, such as temperature and pressure, as well as by contaminants and how it can be modified through the use of ski waxes or the microtextures of blades or ski soles. The authors also cover, in turn, the different disciplines in winter sports: skiing (both alpine and cross country), skating and jumping, bob sledding and skeleton, hockey and curling, with attention given to both equipment design and on the simulation of gesture and track optimization.
Availability
No copy data
Detail Information
- Series Title
-
-
- Call Number
-
-
- Publisher
-
:
Springer New York, NY.,
2016
- Collation
-
VIII, 383
- Language
-
English
- ISBN/ISSN
-
978-1-4939-3020-3
- Classification
-
NONE
- Content Type
-
-
- Media Type
-
computer
- Carrier Type
-
-
- Edition
-
1
- Subject(s)
-
- Specific Detail Info
-
-
- Statement of Responsibility
-
Francesco Braghin, Federico Cheli, Stefano Maldifassi, Stefano Melzi, Edoardo Sabbioni
Other Information
- Cataloger
-
Suwardi
- Source
-
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-4939-3020-3
- Validator
-
-
- Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
-
-
- Journal Volume
-
-
- Journal Issue
-
-
- Subtitle
-
-
- Parallel Title
-
-
Other version/related
No other version available
File Attachment
- The Engineering Approach to Winter Sports
The Engineering Approach to Winter Sports presents the state-of-the-art research in the field of winter sports in a harmonized and comprehensive way for a diverse audience of engineers, equipment and facilities designers, and materials scientists. The book examines the physics and chemistry of snow and ice with particular focus on the interaction (friction) between sports equipment and snow/ice, how it is influenced by environmental factors, such as temperature and pressure, as well as by contaminants and how it can be modified through the use of ski waxes or the microtextures of blades or ski soles. The authors also cover, in turn, the different disciplines in winter sports: skiing (both alpine and cross country), skating and jumping, bob sledding and skeleton, hockey and curling, with attention given to both equipment design and on the simulation of gesture and track optimization.
You must be logged in to post a comment