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Fractals: A User's Guide for the Natural Sciences | Oxford Science Publications | Applications in Physics, Biology & Environmental Studies
Fractals: A User's Guide for the Natural Sciences | Oxford Science Publications | Applications in Physics, Biology & Environmental Studies
Fractals: A User's Guide for the Natural Sciences | Oxford Science Publications | Applications in Physics, Biology & Environmental Studies

Fractals: A User's Guide for the Natural Sciences | Oxford Science Publications | Applications in Physics, Biology & Environmental Studies

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Description

This insightful work explains Mandelbrot's fractal geometry and describes some of its most interesting applications. Fractal geometry exploits a characteristic property of the real world--self-similarity--to find simple rules for the assembly of complex natural objects. Beginning with the foundations of measurement in Euclidean geometry, the authors progress from analogues in the geometry of random fractals to applications spanning the natural sciences, including the developmental biology of neurons and pancreatic islets, fluctuations of bird populations, patterns in vegetative ecosystems, and even earthquake models. Written to enable students and researchers to master the methods of this timely subject, the book steers a middle course between the formality of many papers in mathematics and the informality of picture-orientated books on fractals. It is both a logically developed text and an essential "fractals for users" handbook. It is an essential resource for researchers and students in ecology, biology, applied mathematics, and plant and environmental sciences.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
It's an odd book.According to the book's review is in between the formality of many papers and a picture oriented book.The first two lines of its table of contents are:chapter. 1 Our view of nature page. 7... chapter. 2 Fractals and power law scaling 15...36The chapter 1 is what any picture intended book on fractals has. The chapter 2, where the fun begins and basic concepts as "power law", "fractal dimension" are introduced is incomprehensible.Nevertheless it seems to be an interesting book about applications of fractals. I'm talking about "Part III", page > 80 to 233 (the end).It's curious and inconsistent book at the beginning: it talks to beginners in a way that is incomprehensible for a beginner!.If you are a beginner in fractals as I am, you need another book!.