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How do "they" know that each one is different?
Do scientists run outside while it snows, catch one then quickly run back inside and look at it before it melts??
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You can do that but there is a slightly more comfortable way. You go outside with a microscope slide that has been chilled below 0degC and catch a flake on it. You also have a small bottle of prepared liquid in a dropping bottle which has also been chilled below 0degC. I cannot remember what this liquid was called (it was 35 years ago) but it evaporated leaving an extremely thin coating on the snowflake. The slide is then brought indoors where the flake is allowed to melt and evaporate leaving the coating in its original shape. The mould of the snowflake can then be photographed or viewed down a microscope at leisure and in the comfort of a warm laboratory.
How do you "know" every person is different?
Seriously though there are a huge number of possible permutations so the chances of you finding two identical snowflakes are vanishingly small.
However with the huge number of snowflakes that do fall some somewhere are probably as close to identical as makes no odds.
http://tafkac.org/faq2k/science_51.html
More interestingly where does this belief come from? I have no idea but I'd love to know if anybody else knows where it originated from.