Fractal

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A fractal is a natural phenomenon or a mathematical set that exhibits a repeating pattern that displays at every scale.

Description

If the replication is exactly the same at every scale, it is called a self-similar pattern. An example of this is the Menger Sponge.

Fractals can also be nearly the same at different levels.

Scaling

Fractals are different from other geometric figures because of the way in which they scale.

Doubling the edge lengths of a polygon multiplies its area by four, which is two (the ratio of the new to the old side length) raised to the power of two (the dimension of the space the polygon resides in).

Likewise, if the radius of a sphere is doubled, its volume scales by eight, which is two (the ratio of the new to the old radius) to the power of three (the dimension that the sphere resides in).

But if a fractal's one-dimensional lengths are all doubled, the spatial content of the fractal scales by a power that is not necessarily an integer.

This power is called the fractal dimension of the fractal, and it usually exceeds the fractal's topological dimension.

Usually nowhere differentiable

As mathematical equations, fractals are usually nowhere differentiable.

Infinite fractal curve

An infinite fractal curve can be conceived of as winding through space differently from an ordinary line, still being a 1-dimensional line yet having a fractal dimension indicating it also resembles a surface.

History

The mathematical roots of the idea of fractals have been traced throughout the years as a formal path of published works, starting in the 17th century with notions of recursion, then moving through increasingly rigorous mathematical treatment of the concept to the study of continuous but not differentiable functions in the 19th century, and on to the coining of the word fractal in the 20th century with a subsequent burgeoning of interest in fractals and computer-based modelling in the 21st century.

The term "fractal" was first used by mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot in 1975.

Mandelbrot based it on the Latin frāctus meaning "broken" or "fractured", and used it to extend the concept of theoretical fractional dimensions to geometric patterns in nature.

There is some disagreement amongst authorities about how the concept of a fractal should be formally defined. Mandelbrot himself summarized it as "beautiful, damn hard, increasingly useful. That's fractals."

The general consensus is that theoretical fractals are infinitely self-similar, iterated, and detailed mathematical constructs having fractal dimensions, of which many examples have been formulated and studied in great depth.

Fractals are not limited to geometric patterns, but can also describe processes in time.

Fractal patterns with various degrees of self-similarity have been rendered or studied in images, structures and sounds and found in nature, technology, art, and law.

See also

External links