The Algorithmic Beauty of PlantsSpringer New York, 27 de mar. de 1996 - 228 páginas The beauty of plants has attracted the attention of mathematicians for Mathematics centuries. Conspicuous geometric features such as the bilateral sym and beauty metry of leaves, the rotational symmetry of flowers, and the helical arrangements of scales in pine cones have been studied most exten sively. This focus is reflected in a quotation from Weyl [159, page 3], "Beauty is bound up with symmetry. " This book explores two other factors that organize plant structures and therefore contribute to their beauty. The first is the elegance and relative simplicity of developmental algorithms, that is, the rules which describe plant development in time. The second is self-similarity, char acterized by Mandelbrot [95, page 34] as follows: When each piece of a shape is geometrically similar to the whole, both the shape and the cascade that generate it are called self-similar. This corresponds with the biological phenomenon described by Herman, Lindenmayer and Rozenberg [61]: In many growthprocesses of living organisms, especially of plants, regularly repeated appearances of certain multicel lular structures are readily noticeable. . . . In the case of a compound leaf, for instance, some of the lobes (or leaflets), which are parts of a leaf at an advanced stage, have the same shape as the whole leaf has at an earlier stage. Thus, self-similarity in plants is a result of developmental processes. Growth and By emphasizing the relationship between growth and form, this book form follows a long tradition in biology. |
Conteúdo
Graphical modeling using Lsystems | 1 |
Modeling of trees | 51 |
Developmental models of herbaceous plants | 63 |
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The Algorithmic Beauty of Plants Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz,Aristid Lindenmayer Visualização parcial - 2012 |
Termos e frases comuns
Anabaena apex applied Aristid Lindenmayer axial tree axiom basipetal biological brackets branching angles branching pattern branching structures capitulum captured cell divisions cellwork Chapter construction context corresponding create cylinder cymes D. R. Fowler define derivation step described Developmental sequence divergence angle elongation equation example FASS curves files finite florets flowering sequence fractals gametophyte geometric graphics growth functions Hanan heterocysts Hilbert curve images inflorescences initial internodes iterated function systems L-system L-system specified labels lateral apices lateral segments leaf length letter Lindenmayer main axis map L-system markers method Microsorium module monopodial object parameters parametric L-system parametric word parastichies partial L-system Patella vulgata periclinal wall petals phyllotactic patterns phyllotaxis plant models polygon predecessor production p₁ Prusinkiewicz racemes recursive represented resulting self-similarity shape shown in Figure signal simulation spiral string surface symbols sympodial T₁ terminal thallus tiles transformations turtle interpretation values vertex vertices virtual laboratory
