Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Snow

I love snow!  Now if I lived in Boston or other areas that snow is measured in feet and not inches, I may have a different attitude.  But here in Virginia, snow is something that may or may not fall each winter.  This year snow has been elusive in the Fredericksburg area until this week.  There is something special about going to sleep as the snow is falling and wake up to a world that has been turned white.  The air feels and smells different, the snow changes the way things sound, and changes how the landscape looks.  Trees that were brown yesterday have white branches, evergreen branches are drooping with the weight of snow; the crunch of snow compacting with every step......Whats not to love.

Have you ever wondered how snowflakes are formed?  I found a Q & A from December 10, 2013 on the NOAA web site: http://www.noaa.gov/features/02_monitoring/snowflakes_2013.html that explains how these beautiful white flakes are made.

How do snowflakes form?

The science behind snow


NODC's 50th Aniv.
High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
Q: How are snowflakes formed? 

A:  A snowflake begins to form when an extremely cold water droplet freezes onto a pollen or dust particle in the sky. This creates an ice crystal. As the ice crystal falls to the ground, water vapor freezes onto the primary crystal, building new crystals – the six arms of the snowflake.

That’s the short answer.

The more complex explanation is this:

These ice crystals that make up snowflakes are symmetrical (or patterned) because they reflect the internal order of the crystal’s water molecules as they arrange themselves in predetermined spaces (known as “crystallization”) to form a six-sided snowflake.

Ultimately, it is the temperature at which a crystal forms — and to a lesser extent the humidity of the air — that determines the basic shape of the ice crystal. Thus, we see long needle-like crystals at 23 degrees F and very flat plate-like crystals at 5 degrees F.

The intricate shape of a single arm of the snowflake is determined by the atmospheric conditions experienced by entire ice crystal as it falls. A crystal might begin to grow arms in one manner, and then minutes or even seconds later, slight changes in the surrounding temperature or humidity causes the crystal to grow in another way. Although the six-sided shape is always maintained, the ice crystal (and its six arms) may branch off in new directions. Because each arm experiences the same atmospheric conditions, the arms look identical.

Q: So, why are no two snowflakes exactly alike?


A: 
Well, that’s because individual snowflakes all follow slightly different paths from the sky to the ground —and thus encounter slightly different atmospheric conditions along the way. Therefore, they all tend to look unique, resembling everything from prisms and needles to the familiar lacy pattern. 

So now you know!  Enjoy the snow....

Retrieved on February 18, 2015 from: http://www.noaa.gov/features/02_monitoring/snowflakes_2013.html

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