Chaos Theory & Fractals
Chaos Theory & Fractals
Chaos Theory & Fractals
Research Project
of a chaotic system. The presence of a positive Liaponov exponent causes trajectories that are initially close to each other to separate exponentially. This, in turn, implies sensitive dependence of the dynamics on initial conditions, which is one of the most important characteristics of chaotic systems. What is so incredible about Chaos Theory is that unstable aperiodic behavior can be found in mathematically simple systems. Lorenz proved that the complex, dynamical systems show order, but they never repeat. Since our world is classified as a dynamical, complex system, our lives, our weather, and our experiences never repeat; however, they should form patterns.
at pictures of these systems, and we are beginning to understand much more about them using these graphs.
Chaotic Systems:
Chaos theory can be studies in systems that are complex as well as those that are relatively simple. The calculations involved in chaos are repetitive, boring and number in millions that's why computers are used for such calculations. Therefore, the computer is our telescope while studying chaos. Before advancing into the more precocious and advanced areas of chaos, it is necessary to touch on the basic principle that adequately describes Chaos Theory, the Butterfly Effect. The Butterfly Effect was vaguely understood centuries ago as Small variations in initial condition result in huge, dynamic transformations in concluding events. The graphs of what seem to be identical, dynamic systems appear to diverge as time goes on until all resemblance disappears. Perhaps the most identifiable symbol linked with the Butterfly Effect is the famed Lorenz Attractor. Edward Lorenz, a curious meteorologist, was looking for a way to model the action of the chaotic behavior of a gaseous system. Hence, he took a few equations from the physics field of fluid dynamics, simplified them, and got the following three-dimensional system:
The attractor will continue weaving back and forth between the two wings, its motion seemingly random, its very action mirroring the chaos which drives the process. Lorenz had obviously made an immense breakthrough in not only chaos theory, but in life. Lorenz had proved that complex, dynamical systems show order, but they never repeat. Since our world is classified as a dynamical, complex system, our lives, our weather, and our experiences will never repeat; however, they should form patterns. Lorenz did a follow-up experiment in order to support his previous conclusions. He established an experiment that was quite simple; it is known today as the Lorenzian Waterwheel. Lorenz took a waterwheel; it had about eight buckets spaced evenly around its rim with a small hole at the bottom of each. The entire system was placed under a waterspout. A slow, constant stream of water was propelled from the waterspout; hence, the waterwheel began to spin at a fairly constant rate. Lorenz decided to increase the flow of water, and, as predicted in his Lorenz Attractor, an
interesting phenomenon arose. The increased velocity of the water resulted in a chaotic motion for the waterwheel. The waterwheel would revolve in one direction as before, but then it would suddenly jerk about and revolve in the opposite direction. The filling and emptying of the buckets was no longer synchronized; the system was now chaotic. Lorenz observed his mysterious waterwheel for hours, and, no matter how long he recorded the positions and contents of the buckets, there was never and instance where the waterwheel was in the same position twice. The waterwheel would continue on in chaotic behavior without ever repeating any of its previous conditions. A graph of the waterwheel would resemble the Lorenz Attractor. The extending and folding of chaotic systems give strange attractors, such as the Lorenz Attractor, the distinguishing characteristic of a non-integral dimension. This non-integral dimension is most commonly referred to as a fractal dimension.
Fractals:
Mathematically, fractals are pictures that result from iterations of nonlinear equations, usually in a feedback loop. Using the output value for the next input value, a set of points is produced. Graphing these points produces images. Again, by creating a vast number of points using computers to generate those points, mathematicians discovered these wonderfully complex images which were called fractals, a term coined by Benoit Mandelbrot, one of the first to discover and examine these images. Two important properties of fractals are: self-similarity fractional dimensions Self-similarity means that at every level, the fractal image repeats itself. Sierpinski's Triangle demonstrates this quite well: a triangle within smaller triangles within smaller triangles within ever smaller triangles, on and on. Many shapes in nature display this same quality of self-similarity. Clouds, ferns, coastlines, mountains, etc. all possess this feature.
Fractional dimension means that a shape is neither 1, nor 2, nor 3 dimensional, but actually may fall between these numbers, being composed of fractions. Mandelbrot calculated that fractals have a fractional dimension between 1 and 2. By studying fractals, mathematicians have a whole new geometry for describing the universe, beyond the boundaries of Euclidean geometry. In addition to the famous Sierpenski Triangle, the Koch Snowflake is also a well noted, simple fractal image. To construct a Koch Snowflake, begin with a triangle with sides of length 1. At the middle of each side, add a new triangle one-third the size; and repeat this process for an infinite amount of iterations. The length of the boundary is 3 X 4/3 X 4/3 X 4/3...-infinity. However, the area remains less than the area of a circle drawn around the original triangle. What this means is that an infinitely long line surrounds a finite area. The end construction of a Koch Snowflake resembles the coastline of a shore.
The above are called Julia set of fractals while the followings are Mandelbrot fractals:
It is now established that fractals are quite real and incredible; however, what do these newly discovered objects have to do with real life? Is there a purpose behind these fascinating images? The answer is a somewhat surprising yes. Homer Smith, a computer engineer of Art Matrix, once said, "If you like fractals, it is because you are made of them. If you can't stand fractals, it's because you can't stand yourself." Fractals make up a large part of the biological world. Clouds, arteries, veins, nerves, parotid gland ducts, and the bronchial tree all show some type of fractal organization. In addition, fractals can be found in regional distribution of pulmonary blood flow, pulmonary alveolar structure, regional myocardial blood flow heterogeneity, surfaces of proteins, mammographic parenchymal pattern as a risk for breast cancer, and in the distribution of arthropod body lengths.
industry would have much less realistic clouds, rocks, and shadows without fractal graphic technology. The first consumer product to exploit chaos theory was produced in 1993 by Goldstar Co. in the form of a revolutionary washing machine. A chaotic washing machine! The washing machine is based on the principle that there are identifiable and predictable movements in nonlinear systems. The new washing machine was designed to produce cleaner and less tangled clothes. The key to the chaotic cleaning process can be found in a small pulsator that rises and falls randomly as the main pulsator rotates. The new machine was surprisingly successful. However, Daewoo, a competitor of Goldstar claims that they first started commercializing chaos theory in their "bubble machine" which was released in 1990. The "bubble machine" was the first to use the revolutionary "fuzzy logic circuits." These circuits are capable of making choices between zero and one, and between true and false. Hence, the "fuzzy logic circuits" are responsible for controlling the amount of bubbles, the turbulence of the machine, and even the wobble of the machine. Indeed, chaos theory is very much a factor in today's consumer world market. Perhaps even more important than stock market chaos and predictability is Solar system chaos. Astronomers and cosmologists have known for quite some time that the solar system does not "run with the precision of a Swiss watch." Inabilities occur in the motions of Saturn's moon Hyperion, gaps in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, and in the orbit of the planets themselves. For centuries astronomers tried to compare the solar system to a gigantic clock around the sun; however, they found that their equations never actually predicted the real planets' movement. It is easy to understand how two bodies will revolve around a common center of gravity. However, what happens when a third, fourth, fifth or infinite number of gravitational attractions are introduced? The vectors become infinite and the system becomes chaotic. This prevents a definitive analytical solution to the equations of motion. Even with the advanced computers that we have today, the long-term calculations are far too lengthy. Stephen Hawking once said, "If we find the answer to that (the universe), it would be the ultimate triumph of human reason-for then we would know the mind of God. From a signal processing perspective, an issue of paramount importance is the reconstruction of dynamics from measurements made on a single coordinate of the system. We can use chaotic models for the prediction of next samples in any model. For chaos, such prediction can only be short-term. If we try to predict long-term values in any chaotic system then it would not be of any use because the error associated with that would be very high. The practical example of such prediction is weather prediction. The applications of chaos theory are infinite; seemingly random systems produce patterns of spooky understandable irregularity. From the Mandelbrot set to turbulence to feedback and strange Attractors; chaos appears to be everywhere. Understanding chaos is 'understanding life' as we know it.
Conclusion:
The natural world has always had a chaotic way about it. We can find chaos theory everywhere around us: in simple pendulum, stock market, solar system, weather forecasting, image processing, biological systems, human bodyand so on. Chaotic systems are not random. They may appear to be. They have some simple defining features that they are deterministic that means they have something determining their behavior. Chaotic systems are very sensitive to the initial conditions which means that a very slight change in the starting point can lead to enormously different outcomes. This makes the system fairly unpredictable. Chaos systems never repeat but they always have some order. Most of the systems we find in the world predicted by classical physics are the exceptions. In this world of order, chaos rules! There is a strong link between chaos and fractals. Fractal geometry is the geometry that describes the chaotic systems we find in nature. Fractals are a language, a way to describe geometry. Euclidean geometry is a description of lines, circles, triangles, and so on. Fractal geometry is described in algorithms- a set of instructions on how to create the fractal. Computers translate the instructions into the magnificent patterns, we see as fractal images. Fractals are self-similar and possess fractional dimensions. Clouds, ferns, coastlines, mountains, veins, nerves, parotid gland ducts, etc. all possess these features. "If you like fractals, it is because you are made of them. If you can't stand fractals, it's because you can't stand yourself." Chaos theory and fractal are everywhere. We find them around us, with us and even in us. We study these chaotic systems using basic principles of recursion or a set of differential equations modeling a physical system. The applications of Chaos theory can be found in biological systems, solar system, stock market, weather predictions, signal processing, and many more. In signal processing, chaotic systems can be modeled using fractals. We can apply concepts of fractal dimensions that means that we could use 2.5th past value for our analysis. To calculate a precise model and hence predict a value, we need to have a good approximation of the number of delays or lags needed which can be fractional in fractal theory. In terms of the computations, the time series must be large enough for estimating the Attractor dimensions and the Liaponov exponents and computing the delay coordinate map. That is the implementation problem with chaos systems / models that we need to have a very large time series that in turn increases the number of computations required. Chaos theory is a new way of thinking about what we have. It gives us a new concept of measurements and scales. It looks at the universe in an entirely different way not in Newtonian way but in chaotic way, not using Euclidean geometry but using fractal geometry. Benoit Mandelbrot said, "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in straight line." Understanding chaos is understanding life as we know it. "However, if we do discover a complete theory, it should in time be understandable in broad principle by everyone, not just a few scientists. Then we shall all, philosophers,
scientists, and just ordinary people, be able to take part in the discussion of the question of why it is that we and the universe exist." Stephen Hawking
References:
Edward Ott, Chaos in Dynamical Systems, Cambridge University Press, 1993. Michael Tabor, Chaos and Integrability in Nonlinera Dynamics (An Introduction), John-Willy & Sons, Inc. 1989.
____, Characteristics of a Chaotic Process, IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, vol. 1, pp. 30-31, March 1996. Getteys, Keller & Skove, Physics, McGraw-Hill, Inc. 1994. Manus J. Donahua III, Chaos Theory and Fractal Phenomena, Internet. Some other documents from Internet.