Thanks to my friend Tommy M. for turning me on to this enchanting blog by Cal Tech Physicist Kenneth G. Libbrecht. And not only is Ken a Cal Tech Physicist, but also THE CHAIRMAN of the whole freaking Department! Which makes him Sean Carroll's boss. Very impressive, Ken. God only knows the politics you had to play with idiots to get to where you are. Better you than me. Well done, sir. Enjoy, folks, the rest of this post are Ken's words and his excellent expert presentation: Many scientists throughout history have pondered the mysteries of snow crystals -- what they are, where they come from, and why they are shaped the way they are. Here are some highlights in the study of snowflakes and snow crystals. |
1611 -- Johannes Kepler |
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"Each single plant has a single animating principle of its own, since each instance of a plant exists separately, and there is no cause to wonder that each should be equipped with its own peculiar shape. But to imagine an individual soul for each and any starlet of snow is utterly absurd, and therefore the shapes of snowflakes are by no means to be deduced from the operation of soul in the same way as with plants." -- Kepler, 1611 [1] |
1635 -- René Descartes |
![]() "I only had difficulty to imagine what could have formed and made so exactly symmetrical these six teeth around each grain in the midst of free air and during the agitation of a very strong wind, until I finally considered that this wind had easily been able to carry some of these grains to the bottom or to the top of some cloud, and hold them there, because they were rather small; and that there they were obliged to arrange themselves in such a way that each was surrounded by six others in the same plane, following the ordinary order of nature." -- Descartes, 1635 [2] |
1665 -- Robert Hooke |
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1931 -- Wilson A. Bentley |
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1954 -- Ukichiro Nakaya |
![]() Nakaya's real triumph, however, came from growing artificial snow crystals in the laboratory under controlled conditions. From the study of these artificial snow crystals Nakaya was able to describe the crystal morphology under different environmental conditions, which provides an extremely important clue for understanding the physics of snow crystal formation. The bulk of Nakaya's work was published in 1954 in a beautiful book entitled Snow Crystals: Natural and Artificial. Though long out of print, Nakaya's book offers a superb look at a scientific investigation which begins with almost nothing, and proceeds through systematic observation toward an accurate description of a fascinating natural phenomenon. |
[1] Johannes Kepler, The Six-Cornered Snowflake, 1611; translated by L. L. Whyte, 1966 (Oxford Univ. Press). [2] F. C. Frank, "Descartes' Observations on the Amsterdam Snowfalls of 4, 5, 6 and 9 February 1634," J. Glaciology 13, 535 (1974) |
(Indeterminate, like me. Think outside the box, but when you step outside the box ... try to keep one foot in)
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Cal Tech Physics: Snowflake Science: Not Wasting Money Whatsoever Since 1999: That's Right Kids, There's More To Science Than The LHC
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