Snowflakes form incredibly diverse structures, seen when they condense onto a plate of glass. Every snowflake is different. On the other hand, every snowflake is the same. They are all composed of ice, a solid state of water. Every snowflake is composed of units that have a six-fold symmetry (Figure 8). Every snowflake is composed solely of water molecules. This paradox of the particular and the universal is at the heart of condensed matter physics. Although diversity prevails anything is not possible. No snowflake has five-fold symmetry. Snowflakes have enchanted scientists for a long time. The astronomer Johannes Kepler studied them and in 1611 wrote a small book about them as a gift for his patron. Kepler suggested snowflakes provided clues to deeper questions about the composition of matter. Today, Kenneth Libbrecht, a physicist at Caltech, has spent most of his career studying snowflakes and has produced beautiful volumes of photographs of them.
Figure 8. A snowflake shows a six-fold symmetry, just like a hexagon. The snowflake appears identical when it is rotated by an angle of sixty degrees about an axis passing through its centre and perpendicular to the page.
Condensed matter physicists ask several questions about snowflakes. What is the reason for the six-fold symmetry of the snowflake? What is the connection between the macroscopic properties of snowflakes and the properties of the underlying microscopic constituents, molecules of H2O? How is the diversity of snowflake shapes possible? Is there a phase diagram that defines the external conditions under which the different shapes form?
There is a long history in art, architecture, philosophy, and science, of associating symmetry with beauty and perfection. The ancient Greek philosopher Plato was a proponent of this view. He studied a particular class of solid shapes: cube, tetrahedron, octahedron, icosahedron, and dodecahedron. Plato identified the first four shapes with the four “elements”: earth, wind, fire, and water, respectively, and the fifth with the heavens. Each of these solid shapes is highly symmetric. Every face of a Platonic solid is the same shape (square, triangle, pentagon,...) and each of those shapes has edges of equal length.
Like Plato, Kepler believed that “God is a geometer” and that God’s creation should reflect the perfection of God. These convictions led Kepler to propose in 1597 that the orbits of the planets around the Sun were circular and that the Platonic solids determined the relative size of the orbits. Later this model for the solar system was shown not to be true. In fact, Kepler himself became famous because he showed that the planets moved in elliptical, not circular orbits. Nevertheless, Kepler’s model was the beginning of a long history of successfully relating physical laws to symmetry and geometry.
A key discovery in physics from the past century is that symmetry is central to understanding a wide range of physical phenomena, whether colliding billiard balls, the allowed energies of an atom, the fundamental forces of nature, or different states of matter. Symmetries determine what is physically possible. For example, that energy cannot be created or destroyed is a consequence of the fact that physical laws do not change with time.
In this Chapter I explore three key ideas. First, transitions between different states of matter are associated with changes in symmetry. Thus, symmetry provides a criterion for specifying the qualitative difference between distinct states of matter. Second, for a specific state of matter the relevant symmetry constrains what is physically possible. Third, symmetry is central to making connections between the macroscopic and microscopic properties of a state of matter. The next chapter will explore how symmetry is associated with the type of ordering that occurs in a state of matter.

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