Growing up in Fargo, North Dakota, Kenneth Libbrecht spent a good part of the year surrounded by snowflakes. Flurries could fall there from October to April. Snow was such a common sight, Libbrecht never paid much attention to it when he was younger.
Libbrecht is now a physicist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. As an adult, he spends a lot of time thinking about snow—even though it’s almost always warm and sunny where he currently lives. Libbrecht is one of the only scientists in the world who studies how snowflakes get their structure. “It’s a fascinating problem,” he says. “Had I looked at snowflakes [as a kid], I would have seen all these intricate shapes.”
Everyone knows that no two snowflakes are alike, right? Not so fast, says Libbrecht. In his lab, he grows his own snowflakes in a custom-built cooling chamber. It allows him to control how each snowflake branches and spreads as it forms. Under the right conditions, he can even create identical snowflakes.
As a kid, Kenneth Libbrecht was surrounded by snowflakes for a good part of the year. He grew up in Fargo, North Dakota. Snow could fall there from October to April. Libbrecht never paid much attention to snow when he was younger. That’s because it was such a common sight.
Libbrecht is now a physicist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. It’s almost always warm and sunny where he lives now. But as an adult, he spends a lot of time thinking about snow. Libbrecht is one of the only scientists in the world who studies how snowflakes get their structure. “It’s a fascinating problem,” he says. “Had I looked at snowflakes [as a kid], I would have seen all these intricate shapes.”
Everyone knows that no two snowflakes are the same, right? Not so fast, says Libbrecht. He grows his own snowflakes in his lab. He has a custom-built cooling chamber. It allows him to control how each snowflake branches and spreads as it forms. He can even create identical snowflakes under the right conditions.