(no subject)
Nov. 16th, 2007 10:52 amDumb revelation of the day: The structure of snowflakes is actually visible to the naked eye.
I look at my hair (down, because it was wet this morning because I took a shower to wake myself up for my 7:30 exam followed by two hours of lecture... I got raped by the exam but ehh) and there is a tiny perfect thing sitting in it that looks like those paper cutouts we always made at school after it became illegal to celebrate Christmas. Amazing. It melts. I collect some bigger ones and clumps of it in my gloves, and sure enough, they're individual hexagonal-ish crystalline structures.
I always assumed you'd need a microscope for that, since I'm used to overnight snowfall that gets packed together on the ground, rolling the flakes together in tiny balls, making it look more like very fine-grained sno-cones... and not even used to that because that experience is just a few days at Grandma's when it actually managed to snow for us...
But yay! It falls so gracefully!
I look at my hair (down, because it was wet this morning because I took a shower to wake myself up for my 7:30 exam followed by two hours of lecture... I got raped by the exam but ehh) and there is a tiny perfect thing sitting in it that looks like those paper cutouts we always made at school after it became illegal to celebrate Christmas. Amazing. It melts. I collect some bigger ones and clumps of it in my gloves, and sure enough, they're individual hexagonal-ish crystalline structures.
I always assumed you'd need a microscope for that, since I'm used to overnight snowfall that gets packed together on the ground, rolling the flakes together in tiny balls, making it look more like very fine-grained sno-cones... and not even used to that because that experience is just a few days at Grandma's when it actually managed to snow for us...
But yay! It falls so gracefully!
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Date: 2007-11-16 04:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-16 05:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-16 07:18 pm (UTC)