32
$\begingroup$

There have been many questions and excellent answers in this community about the symmetry of snowflakes, e.g., here and here. There is however one aspect of snowflakes that does not seem clearly addressed: Why are snowflakes flat?

  • One reason could be the crystallization conditions during the snowflake formation, which favor certain crystalline phases. Somewhat similarly to how carbon can crystallize into graphite, i.e., weakly connected graphene sheets ("a snowflake phase") and diamond (and a bunch of more complex forms), depending on the pressure, temperature, etc.
  • Another possibility is a selection of flat forms as the snowflakes move through the atmosphere, while the rest are destroyed.
  • Finally, the snowflakes may be really having a 3D structure upon formation, but polished (flattened) while moving through the atmosphere.

I am looking for answers based on credible scientific sources.

Update
As the diagram given in the @JohnDumancic answer below demonstrates, snow crystals grow in the form of plates at temperatures from 0 to $-3^\circ$C or below $-10^\circ$. The question is thus essentially reduced to the typical conditions (temperature and water vapour saturation) that exist in the snow clouds.

As noted in the comments, snow crystals galling from the sky are not always flat - so information on whether flat snowflakes are specific only to certain geographic regions could be also relevant.

$\endgroup$
6
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ It's not unusual to observe round-ish snowflakes under certain temperature/cloud/wind conditions. Whether these are simply blobs resulting from multiple melt-refreeze conditions leading to 3D ice with lots of interstices I don't know. That said, start with interestingengineering.com/video/… and phys.org/news/… $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 22, 2021 at 13:52
  • $\begingroup$ I’m voting to close this question because multiple websites provide reasons in detail. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 22, 2021 at 13:53
  • 5
    $\begingroup$ @CarlWitthoft if you are well familiar with the subject and resources, why don't you write an answer? $\endgroup$
    – Roger V.
    Commented Jan 22, 2021 at 14:02
  • 3
    $\begingroup$ @CarlWitthoft, "round-ish" bits of solid $\text{H}_\text{2}\text{O}$ falling from the sky usually are either sleet (i.e., flash-frozen raindrops), or else they are composed of many "flakes" that have clumped together. When individual ice crystals fall from the sky, they are virtually always 'flat.' I don't know chemistry, but I would assume that some aspect of $\text{H}_\text{2}\text{O}$ molecules allows crystal growth at the edges of a flake happen significantly faster than on the faces of the flake. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 22, 2021 at 14:26
  • 4
    $\begingroup$ @CarlWitthoft indeed, most questions in this community are answered in textbooks. So it is not clear what you have against mine. Besides, you haven't cited any real scientific resources. $\endgroup$
    – Roger V.
    Commented Jan 22, 2021 at 16:55

1 Answer 1

27
+50
$\begingroup$

The most comprehensive, rigorous work I have ever seen on snowflake formation is Dr. Kenneth Libbrecht's (free) book Snow Crystals (I've linked to its location on the Arxiv). This answer will pull essentially exclusively from this work; think of it as an introduction to/summary of parts of this work that will hopefully segue into the whole thing. So, in my answer, I'll first cover the hidden assumption in your question (namely, that snowflakes are all flat!) and then get on with the meat of the question.

Are snowflakes always flat?

As an introductory aside, I'd like to answer this related question, for completeness's sake. The answer is, as you could probably guess, is a resounding no! There are an astonishingly large amount of ways snowflakes/snow crystals can form. Figure 10.3 from Dr. Kibbrecht's book shows a decent amount of ways the morphology of snow crystals can vary: enter image description here

This is just a selection of shapes! Snow crystals are enormously varied in shape and form. Do note that nice, symmetrical snowflakes are actually quite rare naturally; much snow falls in irregular crystal clumps. Figure 10.1 is a rough guide to what morphologies are likely to occur at differing temperatures and water-vapor supersaturation (asumming constant conditions; according to the author, "The 'water saturation' line shows the supersaturation found in a dense cloud of liquid water droplets"). enter image description here

For more information on snow crystal types, consult chapter 10 of the aforementioned book. Now that we've got that particular line of inquiry tucked away, let's get on with it:

Why are flat snowflakes flat?

Good question! To be fully honest with you, we don't have a complete explanation yet. However, in lieu of an accepted explanation, I will provide a summary of Dr. Libbrechet's findings.

In water ice, the molecules orient themselves with respect to the polarity of the molecule; the partial charge on the hydrogen and oxygen atoms results in the Bernal-Fowler rules (there is always one hydrogen atom in between two oxygen atoms, and thus two strong and two weak O-H bonds for each oxygen atom). Due to the close similarities between the angle of a water molecule and the tetrahedral angle, water ice has a crystal structure that is effectively tetrahedral. There is an ambiguity in the crystal structure as shown in the diagram below (Figure 2.4 in the book): on the left is the structure of hexagonal ice, while the right has the structure of cubic ice (balls are oxygen atoms, sticks are hydrogen atoms). enter image description here

However, only hexagonal ice is stable in nature (at least in ordinary conditions), resulting in a fundamental crystal of the below shape (Figure 2.5):

enter image description here

The shape of this proto-snowflake is the fundamental cause of six-fold symmetry in normal snowflakes. Now that we understand the fundamental unit of a snowflake, let's see how it grows! Now, an important relation in snowflake growth is the Hertz-Knudsen relation, which states: $$v_n=\alpha v_{kin}\sigma_{surf}$$ where $v_n$ is the crystal growth velocity perpendicular to the surface in consideration, $\alpha$ is the attachment coefficient, $\sigma_{surf}$ is the water vapor supersaturation, and $v_{kin}$ is the kinetic velocity. The important quantity here is $\alpha$, which is a number between 0 and 1 and can be interpreted as a sticking probability of a water vapor molecule joining the crystal as part of the surface. These provide a very easy way to explain when flat snowflakes vs column-like snowflakes form (as seen in the charts in the preceding section). When $\alpha_{basal}\gg\alpha_{prism}$, water vapor piles onto the tops of the protocrystal, forming columns. When $\alpha_{basal}\ll\alpha_{prism}$, water vapor sticks to the sides, forming flat, platelike crystals. This leads to the development of nucleation theory. We have a simplified model that states $$\alpha(\sigma_{surf})=\exp(-\sigma_0/\sigma_{surf})$$ $$\sigma_0\propto\frac{1}{T^2}$$ where $\sigma_0$ is a dimensionless constant. The exact dynamics behind $\alpha_{basal}$ and $\alpha_{prism}$ are beyond the scope of this answer (there are a lot of nontrivial effects that scorn our attempts at a nice, pretty model); consult chapter 3 of the book for more information. However, in summary, certain pressure/temperature conditions result in different values for $\alpha_{basal}$ and $\alpha_{prism}$, which is the root behind the formation of column or flat snowflakes.

$\endgroup$
2
  • $\begingroup$ This leaves some things unexplained... but it is very much a kind of answer that I expected: coherent, detailed, with references. $\endgroup$
    – Roger V.
    Commented Jan 26, 2021 at 8:37
  • 9
    $\begingroup$ @Vadim I know it leaves things unexplained, and I'm not extraordinarily pleased with it, but it does provide an introduction to the subject and directs you to where you can learn more (this is, after all, an area of active research; we don't know the answer quite yet!). $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 26, 2021 at 17:22

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.