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All pictures from WinCrv | ||||||||
| Introduction |
The Minkowski Curve is also called the Minkowski sausage. According to
Mandelbrot, the origin of the curve is uncertain ans was dated back
at least to Hermann Minkowski.
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| Construction |
As almost all fractals curves, the construction of the Minkowski curve is
based on a recursive procedure. |
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| Properties |
The length of the Minkowski curve increases at each iteration. On each iteration, the length of the segments is divided by four and the number of segments is multiplied by eight, hence the total curve length is multiplied by 2 with each iteration. Obviously, the length of the curve tends to infinity as the iteration number increases. |
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| Variations (using WinCrv) |
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Author Biography |
Born: 22 June 1864 in Alexotas, Russian Empire (now Kaunas, Lithuania)Died: 12 Jan 1909 in Göttingen, Germany Hermann Minkowski studied at the Universities of Berlin and Königsberg. He received his doctorate in 1885 from Königsberg. He taught at several universities, Bonn, Königsberg and Zurich. In Zurich, Einstein was a student in several of the courses he gave. Minkowski accepted a chair in 1902 at the University of Göttingen, where he stayed for the rest of his life. At Göttingen he learnt mathematical physics from Hilbert and his associates. By 1907 Minkowski realised that the work of Lorentz and Einstein could be best understood in a non-educlidean space. He considered space and time, which were formerly thought to be independent, to be coupled together in a four-dimensional 'space-time continuum'. This space-time continuum provided a framework for all later mathematical work in relativity. Minkowski was mainly interested in pure mathematics and spent much of his time investigating quadratic forms and continued fractions. His most original achievement, however, was his 'geometry of numbers'. At the young age of 44, Minkowski died suddenly from a ruptured appendix. Biography From School of Mathematics and Statistics - University of StAndrews, Scotland |
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