alingy1 said:
"You are absolutely right that there is no relative motion at the point of contact, so it is not kinetic friction. It is also not static friction since the wheel is moving, though the point of contact is not; if there were no rolling friction, the wheel would continue forever on a perfectly level surface. "
-"Richard J. Plano Professor of Physics emeritus, Rutgers University"
http://www.Newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/phy00/phy00698.htm
Then:
http://www.school-for-champions.com/science/friction_rolling.htm#.UrpEQZFlPls says that it is both static and kinetic!
What is going on here!?
What is going on here? It is the difference between a real word phenomenon and its simple model.
Imagine a wheel or ball that can roll. If both the ball and the ground are absolutely hard, neither of them deform, then the point of contact is really a single point. When that point on the ball moves with respect to the ground, (the ball slides) it is
kinetic friction. If the contact point is in rest with respect to the ground, (the ball rolls) it is
static friction. Both friction forces are parallel to the ground and their point of application is at the contact point.
Without any other forces parallel with the surface, kinetic friction would slow down a sliding ball.
When the ball rolls with constant velocity, the static friction is zero. When some force accelerates the rolling ball, the static friction opposes the relative motion between the ball and ground, and represents a non-zero force.
In the real word, the ball and ground both can deform and they are in contact along a surface. Your second URL explains it. See also
http://www.real-world-physics-problems.com/rolling-resistance.html.
The forces along the elementary surfaces of contact add up to a force and a torque. The point of application of that force is not exactly below the centre of the ball as in case of ideal rolling, but a bit away from it, and it is not horizontal. That is
rolling resistance or rolling friction. The rolling resistance will stop the rolling motion of the ball sooner or later.
ehild