What Is A Fractal (and what are they good for)? - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

What Is A Fractal (and what are they good for)? - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


What Is A Fractal (and what are they good for)? - By MITK12Videos



Transcript
00:01 every science hold . What does snowflakes and cell phones
00:08 have in common ? The answer is never ending patterns
00:11 called fractals . Let me draw a snowflake . I'll
00:15 start with an equilateral triangle , then I'll draw another
00:18 equilateral triangle on the middle of each side , pull
00:22 out the middle and repeat the process this time with
00:25 1234 times three , which is 12 sides . If
00:29 I do this over and over , the shape will
00:32 look something like this . This is called a coke
00:35 snowflake and it has a special property , no matter
00:38 where I look or how much I zoom in ,
00:39 I will see the same pattern over and over .
00:42 Never ending patterns like this . That on any scale
00:45 on any level of zoom , look roughly the same
00:47 or called fractals . We can actually draw a coke
00:50 snowflake on the computer by having it repeatedly graph a
00:54 mathematical equation . Each time we had a triangle ,
00:57 one side of the coke . Snowflake will turn into
00:59 four . After the first repetition , will get three
01:02 times four to the first , or 12 sides after
01:06 the second repetition , will get three times four to
01:08 the second , or 48 sides after repetition number and
01:13 we'll have three times four to the end sides .
01:16 If we do this , an infinite number of times
01:18 will get infinitely many sides . So the perimeter of
01:21 the Koch , snowflake will be infinite . But the
01:24 area of the coke snowflake wouldn't be infinite . If
01:27 I draw a circle with a finite area around the
01:30 snowflake , it will fit completely inside , no matter
01:33 how many times we increase the number of sites .
01:36 So the coke fractal has an infinite perimeter but a
01:40 finite area . In the 19 nineties , a radio
01:44 astronomer named Nathan Cohen used the fractal antenna to rethink
01:48 wireless communications At the time , Cohen's landlord wouldn't let
01:53 him put a radio antenna on his roof . So
01:55 Cohen decided to make a more compact , fractal like
01:58 radio antenna instead , but it didn't just hide the
02:02 antenna from his landlord . It also seemed to work
02:04 better than the regular ones . Regular antennas have to
02:07 be cut for one type of signal and they usually
02:10 work best when they're lengths a certain multiples of their
02:12 signals wavelength . So FM radio antennas can only pick
02:15 up FM radio stations , tv antennas can only pick
02:18 up tv channels and so on . But fractal antennas
02:22 are different as the fractal repeats itself more and more
02:25 . The fractal antenna can pick up more and more
02:27 signals , not just one and because the perimeter of
02:30 the Koch snowflake grows way faster than its area ,
02:32 the fractal antenna only takes up a quarter of the
02:35 usual space , but Cohen didn't stop there . He
02:38 designed a new antenna this time using a fractal called
02:41 the Mentor sponge . The Mentor sponges kind of like
02:44 a three D . Version of the coke snowflake .
02:46 It has infinite surface area but finite volume . Mentor
02:50 sponges . Sometimes used in cell phone antennas , it
02:53 can receive all kinds of signals while taking up even
02:56 less area than a coke snowflake . Now these antennas
02:59 aren't perfect . There are smaller , but they're also
03:02 very intricate , so there are harder and more expensive
03:04 to make and although fractal antennas can receive many different
03:08 types of signals , they can always receive each signal
03:11 as well as an antenna that was cut for it
03:14 . Cohen's invention was not the first application of fractals
03:17 . Nature has been doing it forever and not just
03:20 with snowflakes . You can see fractals and river systems
03:23 , lightning bowls , seashells and even whole Galaxies .
03:27 So many natural systems previously thought off limits to mathematicians
03:31 cannot be explained in terms of fractals and by applying
03:34 nature's best practices , we can then solve real world
03:37 problems . Factor research is changing fields such as biology
03:41 , for example , 20 scientists discovered the chroma tin
03:45 is a fractal and that keeps DNA from getting tangled
03:48 . Look around you . What beautiful patterns do you
03:52 see ? Yeah . Hi , I'm Julia . Thanks
03:57 for watching . Science allowed . Check out these other
03:59 awesome videos and visit our website . Yeah .
Summarizer

DESCRIPTION:

OVERVIEW:

What Is A Fractal (and what are they good for)? is a free educational video by MITK12Videos.

This page not only allows students and teachers view What Is A Fractal (and what are they good for)? videos but also find engaging Sample Questions, Apps, Pins, Worksheets, Books related to the following topics.


GRADES:


STANDARDS:

Are you the Publisher?

EdSearch WebSearch