Scientists have developed a technique for creating surfaces that can slide past each other with virtually no friction, and their findings could create new opportunities for engineering in nanotechnology and other areas. (Tweet This)

Friction is present on Earth anywhere there is movement, and it can affect objects in all sorts of ways. It generates heat, which is why hands warm up when people rub them together. It can also slow down objects—car brakes use friction to reduce speed—and it causes general wear and tear, which is why drivers have to replace their brake pads—and tires—every so often.

In fact, the tires on the average automobile lose about one layer of atoms every time they spin one full revolution, according to Vladan Vuletic, a professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Friction between objects also can cause engineering problems on the tiniest "nano" level. Very small objects are made up of far fewer atoms—and thus have fewer atoms they can afford to lose. Nanomachines are damaged or worn down much more quickly by friction than larger things are.

That's one of the great challenges in nanotechnology, the study and creation of very small things invisible to the naked eye. Nanotechnology, it's hoped, could bring about new devices that do everything from fight diseases to explore space. One of the difficulties in making progress with nanotechnology, however, is that such tiny objects may not last long, even in favorable conditions.