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The Mandelbrot set – the fractal ‘snowman turned on its side’ seen above – has graced the covers of magazines, journals, and has even been exhibited in art galleries. An impressive feat ...
The most widely known part of Mandelbrot’s work is called the Mandelbrot Set, a relatively simple formula that offers an infinite number of variations.
Still not finished, [Michael] also creates an implementation of the long gone F100-L CPU, once again with added Mandelbrot set flair, simultaneously with the RISC-V project.
Mandelbrot: Art, math, science, and works in progress New York City exhibit explores how all these worlds collided in one brain.
The Mandelbrot set is possibly the most reproduced mathematical entity of all time, on account of how with a bit of image processing, you can make extremely pretty and interesting pictures with it.
I discovered Mandelbrot in high school and had always loved the weirdness of the Mandelbrot set, and it seemed like a good choice.
Dr. Mandelbrot, a maverick mathematician, developed an innovative theory to study uneven shapes and applied it to physics, biology and many other fields.
Fractals like the Mandelbrot set or the Koch snowflake are artifacts of pure geometry, but it took a strange attribute of coastlines to jump-start the study of this beautiful branch of math.
As part of its celebration of Mandelbrot, Google also launched a Mandelbrot Fractal easter egg that allows you to explore the endless patterns of the Mandelbrot set with an interactive fractal viewer.