WordNet
n. the geometry of fractals; "Benoit Mandelbrot pioneered fractal geometry"
Usage examples of "fractal geometry".
They used fractal models to stimulate the crystals because fractal geometry kept the structure sound while providing infinite variety and expansion.
Unlike ordinary Euclidean geometry that everybody learns in school-squares and cubes and spheres-fractal geometry appears to describe real objects in the natural world.
So, the fractal geometry of the fallen criswell structure carries on, even down to the small scale of their lifeboats, she realized.
The length of the coastline of Great Britain must be defined in terms of fractal geometry.
The relationship between ciphers and mathematics is a logical one, and the most recent manifestation of this was the work of a bearded, thirtyish gnome of a man who was fascinated with the work of Benoit Mandelbrot at Harvard University, the man who had effectively invented fractal geometry.
We are currently beginning to arrive at a lot of new ideas about the way that shapes emerge in nature, and it is not impossible to imagine that as we discover more about fractal geometry, the `strange attractors' which lie at the heart of newly emerging theories of chaos, and the way in which the mathematics of growth and erosion interact, we may discover that these apparent echoes of shape and texture are not entirely fanciful or coincidental.