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You are a beautiful and unique snowflake. You are NOT a beautiful and unique snowflake.
No on else is exactly like you, you're one in a billion. You realize that means there's
like eight people exactly like you? Shut up! I am a unique snowflake. That's so cheesy.
There's a lot of snowflake science videos out there on YouTube and they all mention
the same idea: That no two snowflakes are alike. But where do we get that idea? The
universe is a big place, it's really old, and on countless planets with countless snowflakes,
surely two of them have been alike.
The idea that no two snowflakes are alike probably started on January 15, 1885 in Jericho
Vermont. A 20-year-old named Wilson Bentley was sitting outside his farmhouse, freezing
his Bentleys off, holding a sheet of black fabric and a turkey feather in the other hand,
waiting for a snowflake to fall in just the right spot. And when it did he put that snowflake
under a microscope attached to an enormous old camera, and he held his breath, one wrong
breath could ruin the whole thing. He opened the shutter and POOF! Wilson Bentley had the
first photograph of a snowflake ever taken.
Wilson Bentley like SERIOUSLY loved snowflakes, in the sense that he never got married, never
moved out of his mom's house, and basically just took pictures of snowflakes for like,
50 years. Now, he called them "masterpieces of design", of course we know there is no
design in a snowflake, but that doesn't make them any less amazing.
Every plate, every branch, every needle on a needle on a needle, all of those details
are what's called emergent properties. This is complexity that's based on very simple
rules. For snowflakes, those rules go back to the basic laws of physics.
In the air, or in liquid water molecules are zipping around, bouncing off of each other
and everything else trillions of times per second, and we have no way of knowing where
they are or what direction they are facing at any moment. As we remove heat, it gets
colder, and those water molecules start to slow down, eventually their atomic attraction,
the actual hydrogen bonds between water molecules, takes over, and they settle into order. That
sounds complicated, but we just call that "freezing".
The structure of a snowflake can be found in just six water molecules. I know that the
angle between any two hydrogens is about 105 degrees, and I know that's true for any water
molecule in the universe. For some of those water molecules, the other hydrogen is behind
them. Just like that, we've uncovered the six-fold symmetry of a snowflake crystal.
That crystal starts as a tiny speck of dust, or pollen, which catches water vapor out of
the air and eventually forms the simplest of snowflake shapes: tiny hexagons called
diamond dust. Then randomness takes over. There's a very simple reason why a snowflake's
arm grows out here and not here. It's just because it sticks out farther and has a higher
probability that water molecules will land there. More water molecules and more water
molecules land, and then we've got an arm, and another arm, and another arm, and on and
on, until we get the intricate and beautiful shapes that we know and love.
Depending on temperature and humidity, and a lot of factors that scientists don't even
understand, those simple hexagons can give rise to seemingly infinite shapes. Each snowflake
will travel through different air currents and bump into different water molecules. BUT
. . .
In 1998, researcher Nancy Knight claimed to find two identical snowflakes, and they DO
look very much alike. It's quite possible that two of those simple hexagons could be
the same in every measurement of size and mass, but they would NOT be identical, and
physics tells us why.
We know that water molecules are made of two hydrogen atoms and an oxygen atom, but not
every hydrogen is created equal. If we go back to the Big Bang, we find out that out
of every million or so hydrogen atoms created, a couple hundred of them, instead of just
being a proton and an electron, are holding on to a neutron. This is the isotope of hydrogen
called "deuterium".
In Earth's water, even in you, about one in 3,000 molecules will be holding onto deuterium
instead of hydrogen. Out of the million million million molecules that make up a snowflake,
a lot of them will holding on to deuterium too. Even identical looking snowflakes are
not the same.
Now you could love a snowflake just because it's pretty, but it doesn't take away from
its beauty that it was sculpted by chance and physics. To me, that adds to the beauty.
I have to say, this whole "we are unique snowflakes" thing is pretty cheesy. It might be the most
overused metaphor in the history of metaphors, so let me give you a new one:
Snowflakes are symmetrical, but they're not perfect. They're ordered, but they're created
in disorder, every random branch re-tells their history, that singular journey that
they took to get here, and most of all they're fleeting and temporary. Even if sometimes
they don't look so unique on the outside, if we look within, we can see that they're
truly unique after all.
Stay curious.
[voice over] We're not the only social animals that sit down to eat together, but we are
the only ones who cook. Cultural anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss says that above all, cooking
establishes the difference between animals and people
We're gonna put a happy little arm over here, look at that happy little snowflake, every
one of 'em is unique and beautiful, just like you are.