Acut said:
I'm afraid I have to disagree.
When I use a pencil to draw a picture, I'm sliding two surfaces (the pencil over the paper). That would be, by definition, kinetic friction.
If it were static friction, there would be no sliding (the tip of the pencil and the sheet of paper would move together). The maximum one could draw doing it is a dot. But the problem asks the work done in drawing a circumference, radius R. That would imply in sliding between surfaces, and, thus, kinetic friction.
Notice that you may break chemical bonds in both cases.
The two surfaces - ie the graphite layer at the tip and the paper - do not slide against one another.
A layer of graphite is sheared off from the pencil tip and left on the paper. This layer that touches the paper remains in place while the pencil moves forward.
The graphite layer that touches the paper does not slide but stays in place is acted on by a force and that would be the static friction between the paper and that graphite layer.
The force between the graphite layer staying on the paper and the graphite layers still on the pencil are acted upon by a force and that is the chemical bond.
The static friction overcomes the chemical bonding and we have wear of the pencil lead.
Normal kinetic friction also has wear between surfaces but mostly only atoms at a time
You are saying that as the pencil is moving across the paper, since there is movement between mating surfaces, the friction force should be labelled a kinetic friction, and one applies a force to the pencil against a kinetic friction, which I can comprehend from a statics and dynamics viewpoint.
I am saying that if one looks down closely at what is happening at the pencil tip, there is only static friction in play and breakage of chemical bonds, and as the pencil moves across the paper the force one applies is that to ovecome and break the chemical bonds between graphite layers.
That is the distinction and perhaps what the book explanation, is also.
Who knows, the book in question could be a chemistry testbook, with a section on intermolecular forces, and not a statics and dynamics textbook, which would be that assumed from the question and from most of the postings.