Want this question answered?
The trade winds are belts on the sides of the Horse Latitudes. These winds are what affect the deserts and climate of Africa.
Different snowflakes have different shapes and sizes, so one snowflake could have 3 sides, while another one has 8.
When pressure is put on the sides of a plate, an earthquake might form!
Gas pressure
It has 23 pieces of cakeEdit: A snowflake forms in a random order sort of. I have no idea why the shape is six sided in a symmetrical fashion. How does one side of the flake "know" how the other five sides are shaped. And is there a way that this information is somehow transmitted to the other sides? My best guess is that the conditions that form one side (or dendrite) are so close that the other side form in the same pattern.
no
a snowflake???
Yes - as you "zoom in" on the sides of the snowflake, the same pattern occurs infinitely.
Sides = 2 (front and back) Corners = 6 (mostly)
Fourteen.
They usually have 6 sides unless they are damaged.
Most, but not all, snowflakes are six sided
There are 8 days of Hanukkah; and snowflakes have six sides or angles.
A snowflake normally has six sides which are also known as branches. All snowflakes take the shape of a hexagon.
The trade winds are belts on the sides of the Horse Latitudes. These winds are what affect the deserts and climate of Africa.
snowflakes have 6 sides, so you fold the piece of paper 3 times.
A hexagon is a polygon with six sides. A snowflake is generally hexagonal.