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Winter Fern Frost

This window frost photo was taken in the early morning hours, it was on the rear window of a parked car. Window frost also called fern frost or ice flowers, for...
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This window frost photo was taken in the early morning hours, it was on the rear window of a parked car. Window frost also called fern frost or ice flowers, forms when a glass pane is exposed to very cold air on the outside and moderately moist air on the inside. Panes of glass lose heat quickly on cold nights, cooling the water vapor molecules in the indoor air nearest the glass.
The temperature of the water molecules in the air can fall below 32°F without them actually freezing. But as soon as this super cooled water vapor touches the cold glass, it turns directly to ice without first becoming water.
Tiny scratches on the surface of the glass can collect enough molecules to form a seeding crystal from which intricate patterns then grow.
Up close, the crystal surface is rough with lots of dangling chemical bonds. Water vapor molecules latch on to these rough surfaces and crystals can grow quickly.
The structure of the elaborate branching depends on both the temperature and humidity of the air, as well as how smooth and clean the glass is. When the air is dry, the water molecules condense slowly out of the air and cluster together in stable hexagons.
The six straight sides of these crystals are relatively smooth with very few dangling bonds, giving water vapor molecules little to hang on to.
Feather-like patterns are more likely to form on clean windows and when the air is heavy with water molecules.
Under these conditions, lots of water vapor molecules bombard the seed crystal and there is no time for the stable hexagons to form. Instead, the molecules latch on to the dangling bonds that stick out of any bumps in the crystal, which means the bumps grow even faster.
These bumps eventually grow into large branches, and in turn the bumps on the branches become lacy fronds.
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Outstanding Creativity
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Superb Composition
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Absolute Masterpiece
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Genius
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Peer Award
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2 Comments |
valeriemurchie-stolpe
 
valeriemurchie-stolpe December 24, 2014
It is amazing and beautiful the things nature does. This is a great capture of an example of it.
1Ernesto
1Ernesto December 24, 2014
It looks like an intricate expensive acid etching to me. Thanks for the peer recognition "Top Choice"
kathleenweetman
 
kathleenweetman February 16, 2015
Lovely pattern ,,voted
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