The science of snowflakes - Maruša Bradač

573,881 views ・ 2015-12-22

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
If you ever find yourself gazing at falling snow,
0
7761
3318
00:11
why not catch a few snowflakes on your glove and examine their shapes?
1
11079
4263
00:15
You might notice that they look symmetrical,
2
15342
2096
00:17
and if you look closely,
3
17438
1345
00:18
you'll see they have six sides.
4
18783
2341
00:21
You could say a snowflake is simply frozen water,
5
21124
3093
00:24
but compare one with an ice cube from the freezer,
6
24217
2656
00:26
and you'll realize they're very different things.
7
26873
2929
00:29
Unlike ice cubes, formed when liquid freezes into a solid,
8
29802
4205
00:34
snowflakes form when water vapor turns straight into ice.
9
34007
4684
00:38
But that still doesn't explain why snowflakes have six sides.
10
38691
3729
00:42
To understand that,
11
42420
1708
00:44
we need to delve deeper into the physics of water.
12
44128
3628
00:47
Water is made out of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
13
47756
4593
00:52
A single water molecule thus has ten protons and ten electrons,
14
52349
5163
00:57
eight from oxygen and one from each hydrogen atom.
15
57512
3436
01:00
The two electrons from oxygen's outer shell
16
60948
2402
01:03
are shared with two electrons from both hydrogens as they bond together,
17
63350
5199
01:08
and the remaining four outer shell electrons from oxygen
18
68549
3179
01:11
form two pairs.
19
71728
2116
01:13
We call the bonds between these atoms covalent bonds.
20
73844
4019
01:17
The pairs of electrons are all negatively charged.
21
77863
2949
01:20
Similar charges repel,
22
80812
1832
01:22
so they tend to stay as far away from each other as possible.
23
82644
4075
01:26
The pairs form four electron clouds,
24
86719
2639
01:29
two of which are where the hydrogen and oxygen share electrons.
25
89358
4561
01:33
The repulsion between the unbonded pairs
26
93919
2309
01:36
is even stronger than repulsion between the shared pairs,
27
96228
3589
01:39
so the two hydrogens get pushed a little further
28
99817
3369
01:43
to an angle of 104.5 degrees.
29
103186
4018
01:47
The water molecule as a whole is electrically neutral,
30
107204
3243
01:50
but oxygen gets a larger share of electrons,
31
110447
2819
01:53
making it slightly negative and the hydrogens slightly positive.
32
113266
4594
01:57
Due to its negative charge,
33
117860
1442
01:59
the oxygen in one molecule
34
119302
1990
02:01
is attracted to the positive charge of the hydrogen in another molecule.
35
121292
5135
02:06
And so a weak bond between the two molecules,
36
126427
2530
02:08
called a hydrogen bond, is formed.
37
128957
2594
02:11
When water freezes, this bonding occurs on repeat,
38
131551
4078
02:15
ultimately forming a hexagonal structure
39
135629
2349
02:17
due to the angle between hydrogens and oxygen within each molecule.
40
137978
4887
02:22
This is the seed of a snowflake,
41
142865
2628
02:25
and it retains a hexagonal shape as it grows.
42
145493
3216
02:28
As the snowflake moves through the air,
43
148709
2092
02:30
water vapor molecules stick to the six sharp edges
44
150801
4325
02:35
and expand the snowflake outwards, bit by bit.
45
155126
4108
02:39
A snowflake's developing shape depends on atmospheric conditions,
46
159234
3860
02:43
like humidity and temperature.
47
163094
2638
02:45
As a snowflake falls,
48
165732
1373
02:47
changes in weather conditions can affect how it grows,
49
167105
3460
02:50
and even small differences in the paths two snowflakes take
50
170565
3898
02:54
will differentiate their shapes.
51
174463
2395
02:56
However, since conditions at the six sharp edges of one snowflake are similar,
52
176858
4848
03:01
a symmetric snowflake can grow.
53
181706
2731
03:04
Weather conditions affect snow on the ground, as well.
54
184437
3115
03:07
Warmer ground temperatures produce a wetter snow that is easier to pack
55
187552
4495
03:12
because liquid water molecules help snowflakes stick to each other.
56
192047
4749
03:16
Melted snow also plays a critical role in another wintry activity, skiing.
57
196796
5852
03:22
Completely dry snow is very difficult to ski on
58
202648
3558
03:26
because there's too much friction between the jagged snowflakes and the ski surface.
59
206206
5132
03:31
So what's happening is that as skis move,
60
211338
2636
03:33
they rub the surface of the snow and warm it up,
61
213974
3530
03:37
creating a thin layer of water, which helps them slide along.
62
217504
4017
03:41
So technically, it's not really snow skiing,
63
221521
3013
03:44
but water skiing.
64
224534
2250
03:46
But it is true that no matter how hard you look,
65
226784
2632
03:49
you're almost definitely not going to find two identical snowflakes,
66
229416
4649
03:54
and that's a mystery that scientists are still trying to solve,
67
234065
3696
03:57
though we know that it has to do
68
237761
1576
03:59
with the many possible branching points in snowflake formation,
69
239337
3914
04:03
and the differences in temperature and humidity,
70
243251
2944
04:06
and while we wait for the answer,
71
246195
1859
04:08
we can enjoy watching these tiny fractals falling from the sky.
72
248054
5066
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7