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1. What do these pictures have in common? Write a complete sentence.

1. What do these pictures have in common? Write a complete sentence

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1. What do these pictures have in common? Write a complete sentence. What are Fractals?. A fractal is a rough or fragmented geometric shape can be broken into parts each part is a smaller copy of the whole. Self Similarity. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 1.  What do these pictures have in common?  Write a complete sentence

1. What do these pictures have in common? Write a complete sentence.

Page 2: 1.  What do these pictures have in common?  Write a complete sentence

What are Fractals?• A fractal is a rough or fragmented

geometric shape – can be broken into parts– each part is a smaller copy of the whole.

Page 3: 1.  What do these pictures have in common?  Write a complete sentence

Self Similarity

• If a fractal’s parts are copies of the whole the fractal is self similar.

• If any given part of the fractal is an exact replica of the whole fractal, the fractal is strictly self similar.

• A fractal is entirely self similar or strictly self similar, it cannot be part one thing and part another.

• Go to the website below, then return to this PowerPoint.http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/~pbourke/fractals/selfsimilar/

Page 4: 1.  What do these pictures have in common?  Write a complete sentence

Traits of Fractals• Self-similarity-smaller regions

resemble the entire diagram when we zoom in on specific areas

• “Strictly” self-similar fractals- made of exact copies of the original put together.

• “Recursively” self-similar - have some of the same shapes in smaller sections as in the bigger sections.

Page 5: 1.  What do these pictures have in common?  Write a complete sentence

To make a fractal• Begin with a base shape and a basic change

• Make the change to each successive stage of the fractal. Each new stage of the fractal is called an iteration.

Base shape Basic change

1st iteration 2nd iteration

Page 6: 1.  What do these pictures have in common?  Write a complete sentence

Base shape Basic change

1st iteration 2nd iteration

Another example

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MORE EXAMPLES

For the next few examples, continue to press enter so the fractal is generated. You will see the following.

1. Tree2. Sierpinski’s Triangle3. Dragon Curve4. Koch’s Snowflake

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Tree

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Stage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourStage fiveStage sixStage seven

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Dragon Curve

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Koch Snowflake

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PART II: Fractal dimensionWhat is dimension? How do we assign dimension to an object?

When you see: a train moving along railroad tracks,

                                                 

1. In what dimension does it move?

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PART II: Fractal dimensionWhat is dimension? How do we assign dimension to an object?

When you see:

                                                 

2. In what dimension does it move?

a boat sailing on a lake,

                                                  

Page 14: 1.  What do these pictures have in common?  Write a complete sentence

PART II: Fractal dimensionWhat is dimension? How do we assign dimension to an object?

When you see:

                                                 

3. In what dimension does it move?

a plane in the sky,

                                                   

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Fractal dimensionI. Take an unused piece of aluminum foil:

                                                 

What is it's dimension?II. Now, crumple it up into a ball:

        

                                           What is the dimension of the ball of foil?

III. When you carefully reopen the ball of foil, what dimension has it become?

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PART II: Fractal dimension

4. What is the dimension of a fractal between? ________________

Fractal dimension referencehttp://www.math.umass.edu/~mconnors/fractal/dimension/dim.html

Go to the above link for more information about fractal dimension.

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PART III. Iteration and orbits

• Use the worksheet and the following link at the same time.

http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/julia/julia.html

For more details, seehttp://www.jcu.edu/math/vignettes/population.htmhttp://www.ies.co.jp/math/java/misc/chaosa/chaosa.html

Page 19: 1.  What do these pictures have in common?  Write a complete sentence

The Mandelbrot Set• Probably the most well

known fractal is the Mandelbrot Set.

• The Mandelbrot Set is a group of complex points that have a magnitude limit of 2 when iterated in

zn+1= zn2 + c

• The Map is the graph of the points tested

(the points in the black area are within the Mandelbrot set while the colored points are not)

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PART IV: The Mandelbrot Set

Use the below website to complete PART IV of your worksheet along with your calculator.

http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/2854/

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Gaston Julia

• Gaston Julia was one of the first to work with the limits of Fractals. His question was based on the bounds of fractals with a given C. He asked for what values of Z does the equation stay bounded. So to find a number that left the equation bounded he fixed a value to C and so created the instructions for making a Julia set of numbers. First fix a value to C and then find all Zs that leave Z2 + C bounded.

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The Julia Set f(z) = z2 + c

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The Julia Set f(z) = z2 + c

Go to the following website and read the complex number example.

http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/julia/julia.html

If you want more information, you can read more about Julia Sets here

http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/2854/ and click on Julia Sets on the left hand side.

http://www.mcgoodwin.net/julia/juliajewels.html

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Go to the following link and explore the sets using the applets.

http://nlvm.usu.edu/en/nav/frames_asid_136_g_3_t_3.html?open=instructions

We hope you enjoyed learning about Fractals. Next, your group will explore a particular fractal and teach your classmates.

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References• Some of the slides were part of previous

Honors Precalculus Classes at Hinsdale South High School. In addition, several websites have been used to help you understand the concepts.