Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Programming > Fractals > What is a Dimen...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 4 Topic 209 of 236
Post > Topic >>

What is a Dimension Anyway?: Scientific American

by Roger Bagula <rlbagula@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 25, 2008 at 01:37 PM

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=what-is-a-dimension-anyway&print=true

SciAm.com logo

Features - June 25, 2008
What is a Dimension Anyway?

This story is a supplement to the feature "Using Causality to Solve the 
Puzzle of Quantum Spacetime" which was printed in the July 2008 issue of 
Scientific American.

A Whole New Dimension to Space
In everyday life the number of dimensions refers to the minimum number 
of measurements required to specify the position of an object, such as 
latitude, longitude and altitude. Implicit in this definition is that 
space is smooth and obeys the laws of classical physics.

But what if space is not so well behaved? What if its shape is 
determined by quantum processes in which everyday notions cannot be 
taken for granted? For these cases, physicists and mathematicians must 
develop more sophisticated notions of dimensionality. The number of 
dimensions need not even be an integer, as in the case of 
fractals—patterns that look the same on all scales.

Cantor Set : Take a line, chop out the middle third and repeat ad 
infinitum. The resulting fractal is larger than a solitary point but 
smaller than a continuous line. Its Hausdorff dimension [see next page] 
is 0.6309.

Sierpinski Gasket: A triangle from which ever smaller subtriangles have 
been cut, this figure is intermediate between a one-dimensional line and 
a 2-D surface. Its Hausdorff dimension is 1.5850.

Menger Sponge: A cube from which subcubes have been cut, this fractal is 
a surface that partially spans a volume. Its Hausdorff dimension is 
2.7268, similar to that of the human brain.

Generalized Definitions Of Dimensions

Hausdorff Dimension
Formulated by the early 20th-century German mathematician Felix 
Hausdorff, this definition is based on how the volume, V, of a region 
depends on its linear size, r. For ordinary three-dimensional space, V 
is pro****tional to r3. The exponent gives the number of dimensions. 
“Volume” can also refer to other measures of total size, such as area. 
For the Sierpi´nski gasket, V is pro****tional to r1.5850, reflecting the 
fact that this figure does not even fully cover an area.

Spectral Dimension
This definition describes how things spread through a medium over time, 
be it an ink drop in a tank of water or a disease in a population. Each 
molecule of water or individual in the population has a certain number 
of closest neighbors, which determines the rate at which the ink or 
disease diffuses. In a three-dimensional medium, a cloud of ink grows in 
size as time to the 3/2 power. In the Sierpi´nski gasket, ink must ooze 
through a twisty shape, so it spreads more slowly—as time to the 0.6826 
power, corresponding to a spectral dimension of 1.3652.

Applying the Definitions
In general, different ways to calculate the number of dimensions give 
different numbers, because they probe different aspects of the geometry. 
For some geometric figures, the number of dimensions is not fixed. For 
instance, diffusion may be a more complicated function than time to a 
certain power.

Quantum-gravity simulations focus on the spectral dimension. They 
imagine dropping a tiny being into one building block in the quantum 
spacetime. From there the being walks around at random. The total number 
of space­time building blocks it touches over a given period reveals the 
spectral dimension.
 




 4 Posts in Topic:
What is a Dimension Anyway?: Scientific American
Roger Bagula <rlbagula  2008-06-25 13:37:31 
Re: What is a Dimension Anyway?: Scientific American
"Timothy Golden Ba  2008-07-05 05:07:45 
Re: What is a Dimension Anyway?: Scientific American
Roger Bagula <rlbagula  2008-07-13 07:28:12 
Re: What is a Dimension Anyway?: Scientific American
"Timothy Golden Ba  2008-07-18 08:12:43 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Fri Nov 21 15:49:54 CST 2008.