Make Waves-Evolution of the Marvelous Madelbrot and the Birth of the Fractal

in #science7 years ago (edited)

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In 1975 Benoit Mandelbrot published the book “Fractals: Form, Chance and Dimension“. It went unnoticed except for its complete rejection from the academic community. Mandelbrot was a genius, he loved geometry and nature and while in the research department at IBM back in the 50’s he really fell in love with the new fangled machines called computers
benoit.jpg

Computing allowed him to run calculations of curious geometric math mysteries formulated and introduced by Henry Smith and another math guy named Georg Cantor back in the 1880‘s,(had to do with things called iterations). These iterations now known as the Cantor Set were nicknamed the “monsters”.
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Next to tackle the iteration monsters were Gaston Julius and Pierre Fatou in the early 19 hundreds (they both got “Sets” named after them which is a big deal in the math world).

Mandelbrot looked at mountains and clouds and the Japanese artwork of Katsushika Hokusai (shown above in “The Great Wave”) studied the Julius Set, poured said ingredients into a really big computer and came up with The Fractal.
Mandel_zoom_00_mandelbrot_set.jpg

It wasn’t until another clever fellow came along and read Fractals: Form, Chance and Dimensions in the late 70’s that I get to the first point of the Science and Art history lesson.
Loren Carpenter was a young computer guy that worked for Boeing.
images loren Carpenter.jpg

Carpenter started using the fractals to create backgrounds for Boeing jets and in short order quit Boeing, headed for movie land (Lucasfilms) and used this new computer generated fractal geometry created by Mandelbrot to put together and create the graphics for Star Trek II-The Wrath of Khan. So think iterations and Mandelbrot when watching Star Trek, Star Wars and all the Pixar (Carpenter co-founded) wonders. Carpenter is now 73 and very rich.

It was creativity, nature, art, imagination, ingenuity, initiative, freedom and a little math that allowed for fractals to be turned from monsters, one hundred years ago into what may end up solving many of the mysteries of our universe.
Here's what a Julius equation looks like fractalized.

330px-Juliasetsdkfieldlines2.jpg
Turns out our body parts are biologic geometric iterations, along with flowers, trees, seashells and according to a tiny number of scientists (that have escaped established academia) the universe is a fractal that iterates like this close up of broccoli.
fractal3 broccoli.jpg
It wasn’t until around 2000 that Mandelbrot started receiving awards and recognition for his contributions (he died in 2010).

As for Hokusai, he did his best work after he turned 70 and was only appreciated in Japan 50 years after he died because he wasn’t ’classically trained”. And Carpenter? Still creating and very rich.
So go create, look at nature, go play and go live life, with or without acceptance, toys or trophies or use your imagination and get rich..

But first twist a fatty or pour a cocktail and watch this and know whatever created this, created you. Imagine on that for a moment.
11 Dimensions - Mandelbrot Fractal Zoom (4k 60fps)

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Fractals are awesome, and you can make such pretty things out of them, and they go on foreeevvvaaaaaarrrrrrrr.

I'll try to come back and read this again when I'm a bit more awake, I'm sure I missed something :)

hopefully everyone misses the massive typo in the header...For the record you can edit the body of an article but if you mess up the headline you can't fix it!!!!!! Glad you enjoyed!!!

Very fascinating article! I couldn't stop reading:-) great information, I had no idea about this, and now I just want to dig in deeper, fractionally one might say...:-)

You are too kind and witty too. Yes some rogue physicists think this is the foundation of the creation of the universe....

Still not sure a post of this calibre gets .74 cents while a girl can post about her trip to spain and how excellent the hot tubs were gets over $600. This was amazing first time seeing this.

I remember seeing these a very long time ago. I didn't realise that they were found, discovered or invented in the 70's. That would explain a lot of my teenage years.
lol they are truly beautiful and amazing to watch the video constantly zooming into more conplexity. Great post upvoted and resteemed and followed. Wow triple whammy.

Great post. The longer I live, the more I realize that everything boils down to math and physics and chemistry. I followed :)

Technically, there's two languages. Math and love.

I respectfully submit that chemistry and physics are math.

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