Close Menu
Westside People
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Westside People
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Top News
    • World
    • Economy
    • science
    • Tech
    • sport
    • entertainment
    • Contact Form
    Westside People
    Home»science»These scientists have created jewels of amazing forms of chaos theory
    science

    These scientists have created jewels of amazing forms of chaos theory

    Harper WinslowBy Harper WinslowJanuary 25, 2023No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
    These scientists have created jewels of amazing forms of chaos theory
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email
    These messy shapes are printed in bronze.
    Zoom in / The anarchic shapes 3D printed in bronze represent the first step in the shift from chaotic to manufacturable shapes.

    F. Bertacchini / PS Pantano / E. Bellotta

    A team of Italian scientists has discovered a way to transform the amazing and complex twisted shapes of Chaos Theory In actual jewelry, according to new leaf Published in Chaos Journal. These pieces are not simply inspired by chaos theory. Created directly from its mathematical principles.

    “Seeing the messy shapes transformed into real physical jewelry, shimmering and shimmering, was such a treat for the whole team. It was also very exciting to touch and wear them,” she says. said co-author Eleonora Bellotta from the University of Calabria. “We think it’s the same pleasure a scientist feels when her theory takes shape, or when an artist finishes a painting.”

    The concept of chaos might suggest complete randomness, but to scientists, it refers to systems so sensitive to initial conditions that their output appears random, obscuring basic internal rules of order: the stock market, rioting crowds, brain waves during an epileptic seizure, or the weather. In a chaotic system, small effects are amplified by repetition until the system becomes critical. The roots of chaos theory today are based on a Serendipitous discovery in the 1960s by a mathematician turned meteorologist Edward Lorenz.

    Lorenz believed that the advent of computers provided an opportunity to combine mathematics and meteorology for better weather forecasting. He set out to build a mathematical model of the weather using a set of differential equations that accounted for changes in temperature, pressure, wind speed, and the like. Once he had his skeletal system in place, he would run a continuous simulation on his computer, which would output a virtual weather for one day every minute. The resulting data was like naturally occurring weather patterns — nothing happened the same way twice, but there was clearly an underlying order.

    ads

    One winter day early in 1961, Lorenz decided to take a shortcut. Instead of starting the whole thing, he started halfway through, writing the numbers straight from an earlier print to give the machine its initial conditions. Then he walked down the hall to have a cup of coffee. When he returned an hour later, he found that instead of exactly repeating the previous version, the new print showed the default weather diverging so quickly from the previous pattern, that within a few hypothetical “months” all similarity between the two had disappeared.

    • A piece of the odd Lorenz attractor.

    • A sample of attractants made from a Chua circuit.

      F. Bertacchini et al., 2023

    • Exotic attractants are derived from many dynamical systems. Their names are associated with the scientists who first discovered and visualized them.

      F. Bertacchini et al., 2023

    Six decimal places are stored in the computer’s memory. To save space on the print, only three appeared. Lorenz had inserted the shorter numbers and rounded, assuming that the difference—thousandths of a thousand—was inconsequential, similar to a small puff of wind that is unlikely to have much effect on weather features on a large scale. But In Lorenz’s own system of equations, these small differences proved disastrous.

    This is known as a sensitive dependence on initial conditions. Lorenz later called his discovery “The Butterfly Effect“: The nonlinear equations that govern the weather are incredibly sensitive to initial conditions—that a butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil could theoretically cause a tornado in Texas. The metaphor is particularly apt. To investigate further, Lorenz simplified his complex weather model, focusing on Convection of a rolling fluid in our atmosphere: Basically, a gas in a solid rectangular box with a heat source at the bottom and a cooler at the top, where warm air rises to the top and cold air sinks to the bottom.He simplified some fluid dynamics equations and found that plotting the results of parameter values Defined in three dimensions produced an unusual butterfly-shaped shape.

    Harper Winslow
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleNBA All-Star captains choose the rosters live on game night
    Next Article Taylor Swift’s concert fiasco leads to US Senate impeachment of Ticketmaster

    Related Posts

    New Theory Suggests the Big Bang May Be Simpler Than We Thought

    April 3, 2026

    NASA Releases Striking Images From Latest International Space Station Spacewalk

    April 1, 2026

    NASA Asteroid Debris May Bring ‘Beautiful, Luminous’ Light Show Above Earth

    August 24, 2024

    NASA announces the possibility of returning astronauts stranded on board the Starliner spacecraft | Space

    August 23, 2024

    Latest news on climate ‘doomsday’ scenarios: Atlantic circulation and ice melt

    August 23, 2024

    How to watch it in Vero Beach or Sebastian

    August 23, 2024
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Navigate
    • Home
    • Top News
    • World
    • Economy
    • science
    • Tech
    • sport
    • entertainment
    • Contact Form
    Pages
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • Editorial Policy
    • DMCA
    • About Us
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    © © 2026 WestsidePeopleMag.com. Independent stories, culture, and community coverage. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.