Swarovski started a hydro electric plant in 1907. A year later, his three sons Fredrich, Wilhelm, and Alfred, joined the company and began experimenting with making and cutting crystals.
Yes. If the crystals are big enough. Often you can see crystals with no magnification at all!
In your sugar bowl, are crystals of sugar, an organic material. In your salt shaker you'll find (roughly) cubic crystals of salt.
There isn't a factor in clouds that control snowflake formation.Wet snow: water droplets and ice crystals form. Ice crystals grow. Ice crystals combine and form snowflakes. Snowflakes begin to melt. Dry snow:water droplets and ice crystals form. Ice crystals grow. Ice crystals combine snowflakes. Snowflakes fall without melting.
Clouds are air masses filled with tiny water droplets or ice crystals.
By reflecting sunlight.
give me some information please
Crystals were not invented, they were simply found in the ground and someone gave them a name. They were different to what people would normally dig up from the ground because they were shiny.Hope that helped. that's what I think.
30 AD in Southeast Asia in East India.
Nobody invented a rhombus. There are crystals in nature which are rhombic in shape. These were in existence billions of years before the first humanoid appeared on the planet.
No one really knows who invented rock candy , all I know is that it originated on the 18th century people used it for windy talker throats.
Many crystals have faces which are parallelogram and they existed long before there were any human beings. So parallelograms were not invented by people.
Ghost Crystals are crystals of crosslinked polyacrylamide.
NO CRYSTALS are not living!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Granite with larger crystals, basalt with smaller crystals.
you should talk about how crystals are formed and what type of crystals there are
Yes. Salts can form crystals (salt crystals).
G. W. Gray has written: ''The great ravelled knot'' 'Liquid Crystals' 'Smectic liquid crystals' -- subject(s): Liquid crystals 'Liquid crystals & plastic crystals' -- subject(s): Liquid crystals, Plastic crystals