What is snow?

Like rain, snow falls from the clouds. But he'll turn up otherwise. High above the ground reigns a strong cold. There rise water pairs, which turn into tiny ice crystals. Every hexagonal crystal grows until it turns into a white fluffy snowflake star. Snowflakes begin to slowly descend to the ground. Along the way, a lot of these snowflakes gather in the trash, and we see snow.


Snow occurs when the water vapor contained in the atmosphere freezes. At first, tiny crystals appear, clean and transparent. Following the air currents, they move in the air in all directions.


Gradually, these crystals “glue” each other to each other, until they accumulate a hundred or even more. When the dimensions of frozen ice caps are sufficiently large, they begin to slowly descend to the ground. These clusters of ice we call snowflakes.


Since there are large air gaps in the snow between individual snowflakes, it conducts heat poorly. This is why a snow blanket can protect the roots of plants from frost. The same property of snow is used by the Eskimos, streaming from it their own dwelling - an igloo. Snow has found its application even in cosmetology. Beauticians insistently recommend making compresses from snow, with this cells seem to be preserved and rejuvenated. The truth is scary to experiment on yourself, knowing the level of our ecology and remembering mercury spots on plants after rain.

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