snowflake presentation

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SNOWFLAKES Nano at its coolest!

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The powepoint presentation for the Snowflakes program on NISEnet.org

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SNOWFLAKESNano at its coolest!

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What do you know about snow?

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What do you wonder about snow?

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Outline

• When does it snow?

• Why do snowflakes have six sides?

• Is every snowflake different?

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When does it snow?

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It snows when…

•It’s cold (below freezing)•It’s cloudy (water vapor in the air)

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Why do snowflakeshave six sides?

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Nano is very, very small

• A nanometer is a billionth of a meter.

• Molecules are nanometers across.

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Snowflakes are nano!•Nanoscience is nature and technology.

•Water molecules form ice crystals.

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Shape is determined by molecular structure

Basic shapesof snowflakes

Molecular structure of ice crystals

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Is every snowflake different?

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Snowflakes have many shapes

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Type depends on temperature and humidity

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Snowflakes self-assemble

• Molecules and cells form themselves into structures…

• …under the right conditions, with the right raw materials.

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Snowflakes and nano, in the future

New ways to build tiny, nano-sized structures

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Snowflakes and nano, right now!

Ice crystals self-assemble inside the museum

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Review

• When does it snow?– Cold, cloudy conditions

• Why do snowflakes have six sides?– Molecular structure of ice crystals

• Is every snowflake different?– Temperature and humidity

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Image sources

Courtesy of Kenneth Libbrecht, www.snowcrystals.com

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Image sources (continued)

iStockphoto.com

Courtesy of NOAA National Weather Service Collection

Courtesy of NASA Marshall Space Flight Center

Courtesy of IBM

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This project was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. ESI-0532536.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Foundation.