The Mandelbrot Set is like a never-ending coloring book that grows more detailed the closer you look at it.
Imagine you have a special toy box. Every time you play with it, you add a new toy to the box. Now imagine some toys are friendly, they just sit there quietly. But other toys are wild, every time you play with them, they multiply or grow bigger or change color in fun ways.
That’s what happens with numbers in the Mandelbrot Set. You start with a number, like 0, and then you do a simple math trick: add 1 (or any other number) to it, square it, and repeat that over and over again. If the number stays small or just grows slowly, it’s part of the Mandelbrot Set, like a friendly toy.
But if the number gets super big really fast, it's not in the set, like a wild toy that takes over your whole room.
By doing this trick for every possible starting number on a number line (like all the numbers you count with), we can draw a picture of which numbers are friendly and which are wild. That picture is the Mandelbrot Set, beautiful, complex, and just waiting to be explored!
Examples
- Drawing shapes by repeating a rule leads to surprising and beautiful images.
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See also
- Dividing by zero?
- Can One Mathematical Model Explain All Patterns In Nature?
- Does infinity exist in the real world?
- How Does 37 - Numberphile Work?
- How An Infinite Hotel Ran Out Of Room?