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This one-hour program is divided into five chapters.
Choose any chapter below and select QuickTime or Windows
Media Player to begin viewing the video. If you
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watch chapter 1 in
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Fractal Basics
They're odd-looking shapes you may never have heard of,
but they're everywhere around you—the jagged
repeating forms called fractals. If you know what to
look for, you can find them in the clouds, in mountains,
even inside the human body.
running time 11:36
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watch chapter 2 in
Quicktime
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The Mandelbrot Set
In 1958, Benoit Mandelbrot begins using computers to
explore vexing problems in math. They help him to
understand repeating patterns in nature in an entirely
new way. He coins the term fractal to describe them and
develops the Mandelbrot set in 1980.
running time 9:51
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watch chapter 3 in
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On the Defense
Though many colleagues initially scorned Mandelbrot's
work, his mesmerizing fractal images launched a popular
culture fad. More importantly, his book
The Fractal Geometry of Nature explained how his
ideas could be applied in the real world. Mandelbrot's
ideas inspire an ever-increasing number of applications,
including the fractal antenna. running time 10:40
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watch chapter 4 in
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Fractals in the Body
Fractal patterns turn up everywhere in biology, from the
irregular rhythm of the heart to basic eye function. The
fractal nature of such physiological processes, which
obey simple mathematical rules, offers hope of better
diagnosis and treatment of problems as well as new
insights into how such processes work.
running time 10:15
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watch chapter 5 in
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Nature's Fractal Nature
With carbon dioxide levels around the world rising, a
team of American scientists travels to a rain forest in
Costa Rica. They employ fractal geometry to analyze how
much CO2 the rain forest can absorb. running time 7:52
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Hunting the Hidden Dimension Home
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© | Created
October 2008
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