Capturing Snowflakes: Winter's Frozen Artistry
By (Author) Kenneth Libbrecht
By (author) Rachel Wing
Voyageur Press
Voyageur Press
5th October 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
779.3
Hardback
144
As much a work of art as a testament to science, this revised, hardcover edition of the best-selling The Art of the Snowflake (now Capturing Snowflakes) includes a laser-cut silver snowflake ornament in its cover and showcases 430+ images of snowflakes captured by the photo-microscope of the world's leading expert on the subject, Kenneth Libbrecht, a professor of physics at Caltech who also served as a science consultant for Disney's Frozen movies. The snow may seem unvaried to the naked eye, but the microscope reveals an amazing menagerie of beautiful crystalline forms. Building on the pioneering work of Wilson Bentley (1865-1931), Libbrecht has developed techniques for capturing images of snow crystals in unprecedented detail. While wondering at the hundreds of exquisite snowflake portraits, find:
The science behind snowflakes, including how they form on a molecular level and the complex process that guarantees each one's uniqueness
Field notes from Libbrecht's photographic expeditions to the frozen north
The taxonomy of snowflakes and examples of each type: simple plates and prisms, columns and needles, capped columns, sectored plates, stellar plates, stellar dendrites, triangular crystals, double plates, split plates, split stars, and even rare twelve-branched snowflakes
Quotations about the wonder of snowflakes and nature from Aristotle, Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, and more
This book is a breathtaking look at the works of art that melt in an instant.
Kenneth Libbrecht is a professor of physics at Caltech, where he studies the molecular dynamics of crystal growth, especially how ice crystals grow from water vapor, which is essentially the physics of snowflakes. He has authored several books on this topic, including The Snowflake: Winters Secret Beauty, The Art of the Snowflake, and Ken Libbrechts Field Guide to Snowflakes. He lives in Pasadena with his wife, Rachel Wing. They have two children.