Type your answer here... no
If you freeze a live frog, it will kill the frog. You can; however, freeze a dead frog.
No.
They eat frozen or freeze-dried krill, fish, shrimp, and most meaty foods.
it touches someone
go to the gadget room and put it in the big chamber thingy and press the button with a snowflake on it
It doesn't freeze the snowflake, it preserves it. Superglue hardens when in comes in contact with the tiniest amount of water. That's why it hardens on your finger before it hardens on the thing you're gluing. I'm not 100% if the actual ice structure of the snowflake is still intact, or if it just creates sort of a fossil/imprint.
anywhere it wants if anyone touches it they die
Snowflakes are conglomerations of frozen ice crystals, which fall through the Earth's atmosphere. They begin as two snow crystals that develop when microscopic supercooled cloud droplets freeze. Snowflakes come in a variety of sizes and shapes. Complex shapes emerge as the flake moves through differing temperature and humidity ranges. A 3D snowflake is a snowflake with three dimensions: length, width, and depth (like a real snowflake). This is opposed to a 2D snowflake that has only length and width (like a drawing of a snowflake).
You need something really cold. You or anything from inside your house will be too warm and the snowflake will melt as soon as it touches. If the weather outside is cold enough, you can leave something, like a spoon, outside until it cools off. Then you can use it to catch a snowflake. If the weather is too warm (the snow is not sticking to the ground, but melting), put the spoon in your freezer for a hour or so.
It is not scientific, it is plain and simple. Snowflakes are two snow crystals that when supercooled as entering the atmosphere freeze into different shapes and sizes.
At standard pressure, ice or snow can form at 32-degrees F. That is o degrees Celsius.
Snowflake