Although snow crystals are the product of a well-understood phase transition, some basic aspects of their growth have remained unexplained for over 75 years. Join Kenneth Libbrecht, Professor of ...
Like snowflakes, supporting Science News can ... Six sides, six edges, six branches — ice crystals seem six obsessed. In 1611, German mathematician Johannes Kepler speculated in a New Year ...
That branching process creates what we think of as the characteristic shapes of snowflakes. No two ice crystals take the same path through a cloud. Instead, every ice crystal experiences different ...
Much like a person’s fingerprints, every snowflake is unique. But how is it that this natural phenomenal produces such variety? Meteorologist Kristen Currie explains in this episode of ...