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In Pictures: High-res snowflake camera captures magical images

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No snowflake is the sameImage source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLC
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“Snowflakes are a great example of hidden beauty. Water, an incredibly familiar thing to all of us, is quite unfamiliar when you see it in this different view." - Nathan Myhrvold, photographer

Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLC
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Only a few millimetres across, snow crystals present a challenge to film due to their size and fragility.

Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLC
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With a subject as delicate as snowflakes, time, temperature, weather conditions and equipment are extremely important for a photographer.

Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLC
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Photographer Nathan Myhrvold spent about 18 months designing and building a custom snowflake camera so that he could photograph snow crystals.

Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLC
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To keep the snowflakes from melting or vapourising too quickly, the microscope has a cooling stage, giving Nathan more time to capture his images.

Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLC
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These photographs were shot on location in Alaska and the Northwest Territories, Canada. Some of the best snowflakes Nathan found were at temperatures between –26 to –29 °C. Chilly!

Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLC
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The camera is paired with high-speed LED lights to reduce the heat they release and increase the speed at which a photographer can capture the image. The camera has a minimum shutter speed of 500 microseconds. That's pretty quick!