Is it true that all snowflakes have 6 equal sides, and that no 2 snowflakes look the same? Well, most snowflakes do have 6 sides, but they can also be triangles! It depends on the temperature and height of the clouds, and the humidity (moistness in the air). Meanwhile, every flake contains about 10 quintillion water molecules (that’s 10x10x10x10…up to 19 tens) that can line up differently every time. So while two snowflakes COULD look the same, we aren’t going to try to find them!
Wee ones: Which flake has fewer sides, a 3-sided flake or a 6-sided one?
Little kids: If it starts snowing at 1 pm tomorrow and snows for 5 hours, does it stop in time for dinner at 7 pm? Bonus: If each of a snowflake’s 6 points splits into 2 little points at the end, how many little points does the snowflake have?
Big kids: If snow is forming in clouds at 25,000 feet, and you’re flying in a plane 10,000 feet above that, how high are you flying? Bonus: Most snowflakes form around a teeny speck of dust, but if the clouds are -31 degrees F or colder, they can form out of pure water. How much colder is that than the temperature outside right now?
Answers:
Wee ones: The 3-sided one.
Little kids: Yes, since it will stop at 6 pm. Bonus: 12 points.
Big kids: At 35,000 feet. Bonus: Different for everyone…take the temperature outside in Fahrenheit, then add 31.