Sie sind auf Seite 1von 7

Fractal Geometry http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PrintHT/fractals.

html

History topic: A History of Fractal Geometry


Any mathematical concept now well-known to school children has gone through decades, if not centuries
of refinement. A typical student will, at various points in her mathematical career -- however long or brief
that may be -- encounter the concepts of dimension, complex numbers, and "geometry". If the field of
mathematics does not particularly interest her, this student might see these concepts as distinct and
unrelated and, in particular, she might make the mistake of thinking that the Euclidean geometry taught to
her in school encompasses the whole of the field of geometry. However, if she were to pursue mathematics
at the university level, she might discover an exciting and relatively new field of study that links the
aforementioned ideas in addition to many others: fractal geometry.

While the lion's share of the credit for the development of fractal geometry goes to Benot Mandelbrot,
many other mathematicians in the century preceding him had laid the foundations for his work. Moreover,
Mandelbrot owes a great deal of his advancements to his ability to use computer technology -- an
advantage that his predecessors distinctly lacked; however, this in no way detracts from his visionary
achievements. Nevertheless, while acknowledging and understanding the accomplishments of Mandelbrot,
it undoubtedly helps to have some familiarity with the relevant works of Karl Weierstrass, Georg Cantor,
Felix Hausdorff, Gaston Julia, Pierre Fatou and Paul Lvy -- not only to make Mandelbrot's work clearer
-- but to see its connections to other branches of mathematics. Equally, while most authors will not fail to
include at least brief discussion of Mandelbrot's rather interesting and slightly unconventional (for a
modern mathematician) life in their texts on fractals, it seems only fair to give some, if not equal,
consideration to his predecessors.

Until the 19th century, mathematics had concerned itself only with functions that produced differentiable
curves. Indeed, the conventional wisdom of the day said that any function with an analytic formula (i.e.
sum of a convergent power series) would certainly produce such a curve. [3] However, on July 18, 1872,
Karl Weierstrass presented a paper at the Royal Prussian Academy of Sciences showing that for a a
positive integer and 0 < b < 1

bncos(anx )

is not differentiable. Using the limit definition of a derivative, he showed that the difference quotient of
the function

[f (x + h) - f (x)]/h

gets arbitrarily large as the index of summation increases.


As Weierstrass himself pointed out, Riemann had introduced

sin(n2x)/n2

as an example of a non-differentiable analytic function, but never published a proof, nor could anyone
replicate it. [14] Thus, Weierstrass's proof stands as the first rigorously proven example of a function that
is analytic, but not differentiable. While Weierstrass, and indeed, much of the mathematical establishment
of the time eschewed the use of graphs in favour of symbolic manipulation in order to prove results, future
mathematicians such as Helge von Koch and Mandelbrot himself found it useful to represent their results
graphically. [5] [7] Indeed, when one has only worked with curves that are differentiable almost

1 of 7 7/5/17, 10:42 am
Fractal Geometry http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PrintHT/fractals.html

everywhere, an obvious question when one encounters a formula for a curve that is not is, "what does it
look like?"

While these are both approximations, one can see that these functions lack the smoothness of parabolas or
of the sine and cosine functions. These functions resisted traditional analysis and were -- though not due to
their appearance, which was beyond the ability of mathematicians of the day to represent -- labelled
"monsters" by Charles Hermite and were largely ignored by the contemporary mathematical community.
[2]

In 1883 Georg Cantor, who attended lectures by Weierstrass during his time as a student at the University
of Berlin [9] and who is to set theory what Mandelbrot is to fractal geometry, [3] introduced a new
function, , for which ' = 0 except on the set of points, {z}. This set, {z}, is what became known as the
Cantor set.

The function is singular, monotone, non-constant and ' = 0 almost everywhere. It also has the property
that

(1) - (0) = 1 however ' (x) dx = 0 [3]

The Cantor set has a Lebesgue measure of zero; however, it is also countably infinite. [3] What is more, it
has the property of being self-similar, meaning that if one magnifies a section of the set, one obtains the
whole set again. Looking at Figure 4, one can easily see that each horizontal line is one third the size of

2 of 7 7/5/17, 10:42 am
Fractal Geometry http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PrintHT/fractals.html

the horizontal line directly above it. In fact, self-similarity is a feature of fractals, and the Cantor set is an
early example of a fractal, though self-similarity was not defined until 1905 (by Cesro, who was
analysing the paper by Helge von Koch discussed below) and fractals were not defined until Mandelbrot
in 1975, [2] thus Cantor would not have thought of it in those terms.

In a paper published in 1904, Swedish mathematician Helge von Koch


constructed using geometrical means the now-famous von Koch curve and
hence the Koch snowflake, which is three von Koch curves joined together. In
the introduction to his paper he stated the following about Weierstrass's 1872
essay [6]:

... it seems to me that his [Weierstrass's] example is not satisfactory from


the geometrical point of view since the function is defined by an analytic
expression that hides the geometrical nature of the corresponding curve
and so from this point of view one does not see why the curve has no
tangent. Rather it seems that the appearance is actually in contradiction
with the factual reality established by Weierstrass in a purely analytic way.

Von Koch's curve, like the Cantor set, has the property of self-similarity. It, too, is a fractal, though, like
Cantor, von Koch was not thinking in such terms. He merely aimed to provide an alternative way of
proving that functions that were non-differentiable (i.e. functions that "have no tangents" in geometric
parlance) could exist -- a way that involved using "elementary geometry" (reference [6]'s title translates to
On a Continuous Curve without Tangent Constructible from Elementary Geometry). In doing so, von
Koch expressed a link between these non-differentiable "monsters" of analysis and geometry.

Von Koch himself was a fairly unremarkable mathematician. Many of his other results were derived from
those of Henri Poincar, from whom he knew it was possible to obtain "pathological" results -- i.e. these
so-called "monsters" -- but never really explored them, outside of the aforementioned essay. [5] Poincar,
it should be noted, studied non-linear dynamics in the later 19th century, which eventually led to chaos
theory, [2] a field closely related to fractal geometry, though beyond the scope of this paper. It is therefore
fitting that a mathematician whose work followed that of Poincar so closely would turn out to be one of
the forefathers of a field that is closely related to the area of study for which Poincar himself helped lay
the foundations.

An absolutely key concept in the study of fractals, aside from the aforementioned self-similarity and
non-differentiability, is that of Hausdorff dimension, a concept introduced by Felix Hausdorff in March of
1918. Hausdorff's results from the same paper were important to the field of topology, as well; [3]
however that his definition of dimension extended the previous definition to allow for sets to have a
dimension that is an arbitrary, non-zero value [4] (unlike topological dimension) ended up being integral
to the definition of a fractal, as Mandelbrot defined fractals "a set having Hausdorff dimension strictly
greater than its topological dimension." [2]

As soon as Hausdorff introduced this new, expanded definition of dimension, it was the subject of
investigation -- in particular by Abraham Samilovitch Besicovitch, who, from 1934 to early 1937 wrote no
less than three papers referencing Hausdorff's work. [3] Sadly, by this time, Hausdorff was experiencing
difficulties living as a Jew in Nazi Germany. He was forced to give up his post as a professor at the
University of Bonn in 1935, and even though he continued to work on set theory and topology, his work
could only be published outside of Germany. Despite temporarily managing to avoid being sent to a
concentration camp, the situation in Germany quickly became unbearable and, with nowhere else to go,
he, along with his wife and sister-in-law, opted to commit suicide in January 1942. [4]

The Hausdorff dimension, d, of a self-similar set -- its connection to fractal geometry, though, as

3 of 7 7/5/17, 10:42 am
Fractal Geometry http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PrintHT/fractals.html

previously stated, there are many other applications of Hausdorff dimension -- which is scaled down by
ratios r1 , r2 , ... , rN (i.e. the first iteration of the set is the whole set, scaled down by a factor of r1)
satisfies the following two equations [2]:

r1d + r2d + ... + rNd = 1 and Nrd =1.

These equations, however, do not appear in Hausdorff's paper, as they relate directly to fractals (and
calculating the dimension of a fractal), which were ideas that would have been unknown to Hausdorff.
Still, from these two equations, it is easy to see how one can obtain a dimension that is not a whole
number, as [2]

d = log(N) / log(log(1/r).

At nearly the same time that Hausdorff did his research, two French mathematicians, Gaston Julia and
Pierre Fatou, developed results (though not together) that ended up being important to fractal geometry.
They studied mappings of the complex plane and iterative functions. Their work with iterative functions
led to the ideas of attractors, points in space which attract other points to them; and repellors, points in
space that repel other points, usually to another attractor. These concepts are also important to chaos
theory. The boundaries of the various basins of attraction turned out to be very complicated and are
known today as Julia sets, [7] an example of which can be seen in Figure 6. A more analytic definition of a
Julia set for a function, f (z), is [2]

J (f ) = {z | f (n)(z) as n }.

Namely, "the Julia set of f is the boundary of the set of points z C that escape to infinity under repeated
iteration by f (z)." [2]

Because Fatou and Julia (and, by extension, their


work) predated computers, they were unable to
generate pictures such as the one on the right, which is
the graph of millions of iterations of a function. They
were limited to what they could do by hand, which
would only be about three or four iterations. [7] Julia
published a 199-page paper in 1918 called Mmoire
sur l'iteration des fonctions rationelles, which
discussed much of his work on iterative functions and
describing the Julia set. With this paper, Julia won the
Grand Prix of the Acadmie des Sciences and became extremely famous in mathematical circles
throughout the 1920s. However, despite this prominence, his work on iteration fell into obscurity for about
fifty years. [11]

Fatou, on the other hand, did not achieve the same level of fame as Julia, even contemporarily, despite
discovering very similar results -- though in a different manner -- and also submitting them to be
published. He submitted an announcement of his results to Comptes Rendus, while Julia had chosen to
send his opus to the Journal de Mathmatiques Pures et Appliques. Julia, protective of his work, sent
letters to Comptes Rendus asking them to investigate whose results had priority. The publication duly
launched an investigation and included a note on Julia's findings in the same issue as the Fatou's
announcement. This apparently discouraged Fatou enough to keep him from entering for the Grand Prix.
Still, the Acadmie des Sciences gave him some recognition and awarded him a prize for his paper on the
topic. [10]

Julia sets can be completely disconnected, in which case they are "dust" (Figure 7) -- similar to the Cantor

4 of 7 7/5/17, 10:42 am
Fractal Geometry http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PrintHT/fractals.html

set (Figure 4) -- or they are completely connected (Figure 6). On rare occasions, they can be "dendrites"
(Figure 8), where they are "made up completely of continuously sub-branching lines, which are only just
connected since the removal of any point from them would split them in two," [7] at which point, they
would be considered "dust". [7]

The method for deciding whether or not a set is connected is to calculate out the orbit of the starting point.
The orbit for a starting point, x0 , is the sequence [2]

(x0 , x1 , x2 , ... ) where for each i N we have xi = f (xi-1).

If this sequence goes off to infinity, then the set is disconnected. Otherwise, it is connected. [7]

In 1938, the year after Besicovitch's last paper on


Hausdorff dimension, Paul Lvy produced a
comprehensive treatment on the property of
self-similarity. He showed that the von Koch curve was
just one of many examples of a self-similar curve, though
von Koch himself had stated that his curve could be
generalized. The curves generated by Lvy (see Figure 9
for an example -- the green and blue sets are two smaller
copies of the larger set) were iterative and connected and,
with enough iterations, covers (or tiles) the plane. Lvy's
curves, however, are not fractals, as they have both a Hausdorff and a topological dimension of two. [3]

Little did anyone at this time suspect that there was someone, albeit still a very young person, who would
unite the works of Lvy and Hausdorff. Benoit Mandelbrot was born in 1924 in Warsaw, Poland and, like
Hausdorff, he was also Jewish, though his family managed to escape life under the Third Reich in 1936 by
leaving Poland for France, where family and friends helped them set up their new lives. One of
Mandelbrot's uncles, Szolem Mandelbrojt, was a pure mathematician, who took an interest in the young
Mandelbrot and tried to steer him towards mathematics. In fact, in 1945, Mandelbrojt showed his nephew
the works of Fatou and Julia, though the young Mandelbrot initially did not take much of an interest. [13]

Mandelbrot's education was very uneven, and completely interrupted in 1940, when Mandelbrot and his
family were forced to flee the Nazis again. This time they went to central France. Mandelbrot, like Helge
von Koch before him, preferred visual representations of mathematical problems, as opposed to the
symbolic, [7] though this may also stem from his lack of formal education, due to World War II. [13]
Unfortunately, this would bring him into direct conflict with the teaching style of "Bourbaki", a group of
mathematicians whose belief in solving problems analytically (as opposed to visually) dominated the
teaching of mathematics in France at the time. [7]

5 of 7 7/5/17, 10:42 am
Fractal Geometry http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PrintHT/fractals.html

After the war had ended, Mandelbrot took the entrance exams for the cole Polytechnique in Paris, despite
having no preparation. He did very well in the mathematics section, where he could employ his ability to
solve problems through visualisation to answer questions. While this method was not always possible on
other sections, he managed to pass [7] and after a one-day career at the cole Normale, Mandelbrot started
at the cole Polytechnique, where he met another of his mentors, Paul Lvy, [13] who was a professor at
there from 1920 until his retirement in 1959 [12].

After completing his studies, Mandelbrot moved to New York, where he started work for IBM's Thomas J.
Watson Research Centre. The company gave him a free hand in choosing a topic of study, which allowed
him to explore and develop concepts using his own methods, without having to worry about the reaction
of the academic community. In 1967, while still there, Mandelbrot wrote his landmark essay, How Long Is
the Coast of Britain? Statistical Self-Similarity and Fractional Dimension [8], in which he linked the idea
of previous mathematicians to the real world -- namely coastlines, which he claimed were "statistically
self-similar". He argued that [8]

Self-similarity methods are a potent tool in the study of chance phenomena, including
geostatics, as well as economics and physics. In fact, many noises have dimensions D
contained between 0 and 1 ...

After this essay and with the aid of computers, Mandelbrot returned to the work of Julia and Fatou. With
the ability to see, for the first time, what these sets looked like in their limits, Mandelbrot came up with the
idea of mapping the values of c C for which the Julia set for the function fc (z) = z2 + c is connected.
This creates the Mandelbrot set, M (Figure 10), which is more formally denoted as

M = {c C | fc(n)(z) is finite as n }

The Mandelbrot set is, for many, the quintessential


fractal. When one zooms in on some part of the edge,
one notices that the Mandelbrot set is, indeed,
self-similar. Furthermore, if one zooms in even
further on various sections of the edge, one obtains
different Julia sets. In fact, it is "asymptotically
similar to Julia sets near any point on its boundary,"
as proved in a theorem by the Chinese mathematician
Tan Lei. [7]

Mandelbrot has managed not only to invent the


discipline of fractal geometry, but has also
popularized it through its applications to other areas
of science. He clearly believed this was important, as
he once stated [3]

The rare scholars who are nomads-by-choice are essential to the intellectual welfare of the
settled disciplines.

As he hinted in How Long Is the Coast of Britain? fractal geometry comes in useful in representing natural
phenomena; things such as coastlines, the silhouette of a tree, or the shape of snowflakes -- things are not
easily represented using traditional Euclidean geometry. After all, no organic entity comes to mind when
one contemplates a square or a circle. Equally, no simple shape from Euclidean geometry comes to mind
when contemplating things such as the path of a river. Even the earth is not a perfect sphere, however
convenient it may be for one's calculations to treat it as such. Furthermore, fractal geometry and chaos
theory have important connections to physics, medicine, and the study of population dynamics. [7]

6 of 7 7/5/17, 10:42 am
Fractal Geometry http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PrintHT/fractals.html

However, even if the field lacked these links, it would be hard for those so inclined to resist the aesthetic
appeal of most fractals.

Mandelbrot's non-traditional approach led him to invent an amazing and useful new form of mathematics.
However, no mathematician can claim to have developed his results in complete isolation from anyone
else's. Mandelbrot's discovery owes a great deal to the mathematicians who preceded him, such as
Weierstrass and von Koch, but especially to Julia, Fatou, and Hausdorff. He also benefitted from access to
computers, which allowed him not only to build upon the works of others in a new way -- one which had
definitely not been done before -- but to use his preferred method of solving problems -- namely
visualisation. Furthermore, his invention also makes a case for the importance of the study of pure
mathematics: until Mandelbrot came along and united the eclectic ideas of Hausdorff, Julia, et al, they
represented very abstract mathematical ideas from varying branches of (pure) mathematics. There is very
little that would interest an ordinary biologist about set theory. However, through fractal geometry, many
of these seemingly abstract ideas (from mathematicians who are relatively unknown outside of their own
spheres of research) develop applications that other scientists and even non-scientists can appreciate. Thus,
the work that eventually led to fractals and their applications are an excellent counterexample to the
arguments of anyone who would dare to denigrate the study of pure mathematics.

Article by: Holly Trochet (University of St Andrews)

February 2009

MacTutor History of Mathematics


[http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/fractals.html]

7 of 7 7/5/17, 10:42 am

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen