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Burning Ship Fractal, Description and C source code. Burning Ship with its Mset of higher powers and Julia Sets; Burningship, Video, Fractal webpage includes the first representations and the original paper cited above on the Burning Ship fractal. 3D representations of the Burning Ship fractal; FractalTS Mandelbrot, Burning ship and ...
Fractals can be stretched by minimizing the Kalles Fraktaler window, hitting CTRL + T, and using right-click to stretch the fractal. In the "Fraktal--Formula" window, users can edit the exponent of certain fractals, seed values, edit properties of a function called Gaussian jitter, and much more. There are also many unique fractal formulae ...
Rendering fractals with the derbail technique can often require a large number of samples per pixel, as there can be precision issues which lead to fine detail and can result in noisy images even with samples in the hundreds or thousands. [citation needed] Python code: Derbail used on a julia set of the burning ship
Escape-time fractals – use a formula or recurrence relation at each point in a space (such as the complex plane); usually quasi-self-similar; also known as "orbit" fractals; e.g., the Mandelbrot set, Julia set, Burning Ship fractal, Nova fractal and Lyapunov fractal. The 2d vector fields that are generated by one or two iterations of escape ...
A tricorn, created on a computer in Kalles Fraktaler. Tricorn zoom onto mini-tricorn Multicorns with the power going from 1 to 5. In mathematics, the tricorn, sometimes called the Mandelbar set, is a fractal defined in a similar way to the Mandelbrot set, but using the mapping ¯ + instead of + used for the Mandelbrot set.
A 4K UHD 3D Mandelbulb video A ray-marched image of the 3D Mandelbulb for the iteration v ↦ v 8 + c. The Mandelbulb is a three-dimensional fractal, constructed for the first time in 1997 by Jules Ruis and further developed in 2009 by Daniel White and Paul Nylander using spherical coordinates.
The Koch snowflake (also known as the Koch curve, Koch star, or Koch island [1] [2]) is a fractal curve and one of the earliest fractals to have been described. It is based on the Koch curve, which appeared in a 1904 paper titled "On a Continuous Curve Without Tangents, Constructible from Elementary Geometry" [3] by the Swedish mathematician Helge von Koch.
Each branch carries 3 branches (here 90° and 60°). The fractal dimension of the entire tree is the fractal dimension of the terminal branches. NB: the 2-branches tree has a fractal dimension of only 1. 1.5850: Sierpinski triangle: Also the limiting shape of Pascal's triangle modulo 2.