Welcome!
Just getting things started - I'll finish this page when I figure out what to say . . . For now, enjoy Wikipedia's Picture of the Day, my treat!
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Initial image of the Mandelbrot set
(1× magnification) -
"Head and shoulder"
(6× magnification) -
"Seahorse valley"
(60× magnification) -
"Seahorse"
(191× magnification) -
"Seahorse tail"
(1345× magnification) -
"Tail part"
(4169× magnification)
The Mandelbrot set is a two-dimensional mathematical set that is defined in the complex plane as the numbers for which the function does not diverge to infinity when iterated starting at . It was first defined and drawn by Robert W. Brooks and Peter Matelski in 1978, as part of a study of Kleinian groups, with Benoit Mandelbrot obtaining the first high-quality visualizations of the set two years later. Images of the Mandelbrot set exhibit an infinitely complicated boundary that reveals progressively ever-finer recursive detail at increasing magnifications; mathematically, the boundary of the Mandelbrot set is a fractal curve. The Mandelbrot set is well-known outside mathematics and is commonly cited as an example of mathematical beauty. These images, generated by a computer program, show an area of the Mandelbrot set known as "seahorse valley", which is centred on the point , at increasing levels of magnification.Image credit: Wolfgang Beyer
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The Original Barnstar |
Thanks for the simplification / clarifications :-) Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 04:29, 9 May 2020 (UTC) |
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