It is a fractal: each enlargement of the snowflake is an identical image.
Technically, you can't. The Koch snowflake is self-similar. So the perimeter is infinity.
you find the area of a koch snowflake using z=(n-1)x/3
1904
Yes.
Yes - as you "zoom in" on the sides of the snowflake, the same pattern occurs infinitely.
an infinite number.
Either the koch snowflake or the Sierpinski triangle
Because a snowflake is pure and beautiful, Niall is both of those, and hes called a "special snowflake" because hes also crazy and wild. Therefore Our Special Snowflake (:
It depends on what the side lengths are for the first triangle
A variety of such shapes can be constructed; a well-known example is the Koch snowflake. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koch_snowflake
yes! the best example would be the Koch snowflake.
Snowflake Symphony Christmas Special - 2009 TV is rated/received certificates of: USA:E