Pilots who do fly aways in winter will often find themselves securing their trikes at their destination at sundown before the onset of bright windless winter nights. Temps will drop to below freezing overnight with no wind, and they will find themselves confronted next morning in pre-dawn as they approach their trikes, shining their torches over their wings, with a diamond - like reflection of millions of pretty little ice crystals. Nothing looks out of place, except for the glitter.
As someone who dropped out of physics and maths at around 16, I would like to pose the following questions/ideas , and ask the more clued up guys to correct, or add comment. Please don't laugh.
Here goes: My wing flies because of pressure differential. Air slows down on the underside of my wing, thus creating a high pressure, producing lift. If the air slows on top of the wing, it might equal the reduced pressure on the underside of my wing, thus creating a neutral situation.
In order for the pressure to drop on top, the airflow must be faster, unhindered, and laminar. If not, no pressure differential will result, and no lift will occur.
The top of my Aquilla 2 wing has been designed to make air flow faster, and the bottom to "heap" up the air.
If I have "stuff", like little ice crystals, on the top, then the laminar airflow will be disrupted and millions of microscopic "windshears" will occur, resulting in the top airflow slowing down to the point where there is no or too little pressure differential. Thus no take - off.
If one wing is "clean", and flies normally, and the other wing is full of this little crystals, the former will start flying quicker, and the latter will lag for a second or two, resulting in a very steep "dip" on the latter, iced up wing, and it will stall dramatically because of the airspeed which is barely above the aircrafts stall speed. One wing flies, the other is almost flying - but not yet.
Am I being paranoid, or is wing icing on a trike a real danger?

