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Old 08-29-2007, 09:08 PM   #1
Undertoad
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August 29, 2007: Snowflake under electron microscope



We've seen tons and tons of different snowflakes under an ordinary microscope, but what happens if you look closer?

This page has four shots of even closer images of a single flake. In fact, it's part of a single arm from a single six-sided flake.

Another page has put all the magnifications together so you can sort of imagine yourself getting closer and closer to the flake, until it's sort of incomprehensible how close you actually are.

Is it best to consider such things in the midst of summer?
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Old 08-29-2007, 09:25 PM   #2
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Sort of loses it's charm this way.
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Old 08-29-2007, 09:31 PM   #3
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I disagree... it's fascinating.
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Old 08-29-2007, 09:32 PM   #4
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Old 08-29-2007, 09:48 PM   #5
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It looks like a concrete snowflake.

How do they know that no two snowflakes are alike? They can't really check, can they?
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Old 08-30-2007, 01:38 AM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brianna View Post
It looks like a concrete snowflake. ...
I had been wondering how they did it, beacause electron microscopes can only image objects whose surface is electrically conductive. - So these are platinum coated snowflakes.
Can we make a necklace of them after they're no longer needed for science? :p

(see their explanation here: http://emu.arsusda.gov/snowsite/4100/4100.html)
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Old 08-30-2007, 07:36 AM   #7
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You are not a beautiful and/or unique snowflake.



Very cool pics.
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Old 08-30-2007, 08:29 AM   #8
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I have no snappy and/or smart-ass comment on this subject.
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Old 08-30-2007, 09:22 AM   #9
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Awesome! I do prefer snowflakes at a normal size or through an amplifying glass or loupe, however.
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Old 08-30-2007, 09:29 AM   #10
monster
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Now there's a worthwhile job -platinum-plating snowflakes....

(shouldn't take the piss -the other half is an SEM chap and gold-plates all sorts of weird stuff )
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Old 08-30-2007, 10:44 AM   #11
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But the fact is if you look long enough, you will find identical "looking" snow flakes.

Quote:
Wilson A. Bentley, a farmer who was born, lived and died in the small town of Jericho in Vermont was called “The Snowflake Man”. He supported this “all snowflakes are different” theory. Around 1884, at the age of 19, he became the first person to photograph a single ice crystal, by cleverly marrying a microscope to a camera, using an adjustable bellows mechanism. In 1920, the American Meteorological Society elected him to the state of Fellow. They also awarded him their very first research grant, in recognition of his “40 years of extremely patient work” - for which they gave him $25. He continued working in this field until his death in 1931, by which time he had taken 5,381 “photomicrographs” of individual snowflakes. Towards the end of his life, he said that he had “never seen two snowflakes alike”. And so the story arose that all snowflakes are different.

But in 1988, the scientist Nancy Knight (at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado) was studying wispy high altitude cirrus clouds. Her research plane was collecting snowflakes on a chilled glass slide that was coated with a sticky oil. She found two identical (under a microscope, at least) snowflakes in a Wisconsin snowstorm.

They were hollow hexagonal prisms, rather than the classical six-spoked star-shapes – but as far as snowologists are concerned, they counted as snowflakes. But if you want to be pedantic, they probably weren't identical if you were to look at the actual molecules – but at this level, is anything identical?

Since the earth was formed about 4.5 billion years ago, about a million million million million million snowflakes have fallen – but Mr. Bentley made his pronouncement of the cold hard facts after looking at just over 5,000 of them.
http://www.abc.net.au/science/k2/moments/s1784760.htm
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Old 08-30-2007, 11:39 AM   #12
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Leave it to science to make things more complicated...eesh.

Looks cancerous.
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Old 08-30-2007, 12:15 PM   #13
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Luddite!

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Old 08-30-2007, 02:43 PM   #14
Grismar
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brianna View Post
How do they know that no two snowflakes are alike? They can't really check, can they?
The anecdotal evidence offered below shows there's a lot of types at least, prompting a researcher to state there's infinite types and (even more boldly) no two are the same. Knight only proved that there may be subclasses of simple flakes that are likely to have more members (like the plain hexagonal). The poster may be right though, apart from picking at differences at the molecular level, there may even be identical snowflakes at the crystalline level.

It's like saying no two people have the same fingerprints. You can't prove it, but you can show how many variations there can theoretically be. Then you can make an educated guess about how unlikely it is for there to be two or more identical ones.

It's theoretically impossible to prove no two snowflakes are the same. Even if you did have access to all the snowflakes on the planet, there would still be H2O-snowflakes on other planets, in space, in the past, in the future, etc. And besides, it's pointless to prove such a thing.

In fact, it's not what people mean when they say "no two snowflakes are the same". What they're saying is: "the number of possible variations of snowflakes is nearly limitless and most (not all, cue the hexagon) variations seem to have an equal likelihood to occur". But that just doesn't sound like something you'd be telling your kids in the snow .
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Old 08-30-2007, 03:00 PM   #15
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Quote:
Wilson A. Bentley, a farmer who was born, lived and died in the small town of Jericho in Vermont was called “The Snowflake Man”.
So Mr Bentley, for 40 years, struggled, persevered, innovated and froze his nuts off. By dedicating his life to science and contributing to the pool of human knowledge, won the respect and admiration of his peers as well as the scientific community.

Then some chica came along and ruined everything....



Yup, sounds about right.
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