Fractal art - Burning man

in #fractal5 years ago (edited)

This fractal is a bit like a burning man or some superhero like Johnny Storm or even Captain Marvel, when they use their powers.

 The same fractal, but in a slightly different color scheme:

Some technical information

Initial resolution - 3000 x 2250

Rendering Time - 00:50:23

Number of iterations - 32768

What is fractal?

A fractal is any picture which, if viewed as an image, creates a picture which, when enlarged, will still create the same picture. You can cut it into parts that look like a reduced version of the picture we started with. The word fractal was made by Benoit Mandelbrot in 1975 from the Latin word fractus, which means "broken". A simple example is a tree that branches into smaller branches and these branches into smaller branches and so on. Not only are the fractuses beautiful, they also have many practical applications.

Uses

Fractals have many applications, for example in biology (lungs, kidneys, heart rate variability, etc...), in earthquakes, in finance, where it is related to the so-called heavy tail distribution, and in physics. This points to the need to study fractals to understand why fractals are so common in nature.

Some fractals exist only for artistic reasons, but others are very useful. Fractals are very effective forms for radio antennas and are used in computer chips to effectively connect all components. In addition, coastlines can be considered fractals.

Which of these two arts do you like more?

Thanks for reading, stopping by and supporting!

Sort:  

Source
Plagiarism is the copying & pasting of others work without giving credit to the original author or artist. Plagiarized posts are considered fraud and violate the intellectual property rights of the original creator.

Fraud is discouraged by the community and may result in the account being Blacklisted.

If you believe this comment is in error, please contact us in #appeals in Discord.

Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractal