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December 4, 2009

Picture of the Week—A Fractal in 3-D

mandelbrot-fractal

There is something we find beautiful about fractals, those curious geometric structures with repeating shapes that seem to go on for infinity (see video below). Perhaps it is because these mathematical oddities remind us of nature; river networks, ferns and Romanesco broccoli are all examples of natural fractals.

The most famous fractal is probably the Mandelbrot set, named for Benoît Mandelbrot, the French-American mathematician who coined the term “fractal” in 1975. The Mandelbrot set is a 2-dimensional object created through a mathematical equation. Mathematicians had first pondered how to turn it into a 3-dimensional object, a “Mandelbulb,” more than 20 years ago, but they didn’t figure out how to do it until recently. The result is above. Quite pretty, don’t you think?

(Hat tip: Bad Astronomy)





1 Comment »

  1. [...] Fractals are a kind of geometric shape that looks incredibly complex but is actually composed of repeating patterns. Fractals are common in nature—snowflakes, broccoli, blood vessels—and as a mathematical concept they’ve been hauled into use for everything from seismology to music. [...]

    Pingback by A Walk Through the Woods Leads to Insight on Numbers | Surprising Science — January 24, 2011 @ 9:26 am


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