Mandelbrot Set

seen from Russia
seen from Nepal
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Brazil
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from India

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Finland
seen from United States
Mandelbrot Set
This embroidery recreates the first published image of the Mandelbrot set from 1978, using thread to capture its striking symmetry and spiky outline. The Mandelbrot set is a famous fractal formed by repeatedly applying an iterative equation to the complex numbers. Each complex number can be represented as a point on a 2D plane. If the results of the iterative equation starting at a specific point stay bounded, the point is in the Mandelbrot set. Points outside the set are generally coloured based on how fast they escape, forming the fiery fringes around the edge.
Mandelbrot Set, is a campaign kit for FIST Ultra Edition inspired by Half Life & Roadside Picnic that's set at a certain region of rural Nevada, where a military experiment has fractured it into an amalgam of parallel reality overnight. Your job here as FIST is to rescue Dr Okonkwo from the facility and to shut down the Resonator before the army makes an even worse job of doing it themselves.
Buddhabrot | Melinda Green (mathematics discovery | 1993)
In '93, Melinda Green discovered a new algorithm to iterate the form of the original Mandelbrot function [ f(z) = z² + c ] that 'traces the inner shadow' of any escape paths most commonly found in M sets.
The Mandelbrot set itself. I’m chuckling writing this, but I think it is, ngl.
The Mandelbrot Set is Autistic!
Antic April 1986
The fractal image on the cover of this issue was called "Julia Fractal Curves, nicknamed the Mandelbrot Set" inside. The type-in program to generate it did come with the warning that "although some images can be created in a little as 40 minutes, these fractal curves aren't very interesting to look at. For the really attractive fractal curves, you should allow 12-48 hours for each image." The Atari ST section included a more elaborate fractal program in C, mentioning it took "about 20 minutes to an hour" to draw its images. That section also reviewed a word processor called "The Final Word," explained as "a grandchild of EMACS"; the program eschewed the ST's GUI with the comment "The great debate about whether it is more or less efficient to do word processing tasks with a rolling rodent is not yet over," but the review wasn't entirely enthusiastic about the results.
mandelbrot and his infinite daughters all named julia
Mandelbrot set with escape time coloring, but the red, green, and blue channels use different iteration maximums, ranging between 64 and 6400.