Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Helpful Link?

If anyone actually checks in on this anymore, I came across a resource website that has a ton of links. I haven't looked through a bunch but I figured I would post it before I forgot it. It could be helpful. http://rhinoscriptingresources.blogspot.com/

Monday, February 9, 2009

If you’re feeling remedial…

I was away at a job fair in Boston, and in my downtime started browsing for resources that could help me with VBScript.

… a link to Microsoft’s VBScript language reference and user guide:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/t0aew7h6.aspx

You can download it to use offline.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Shells


This shell shows how the golden ratio is used in nature. The shell grows in an arched curve while getting larger followling the exact proportions of the golden ratio.

Snow Flake Fractals


Photo from snowcrystals.com
The snowflake, when viewed through a photomicroscope demonstrates how ice crystals form along structure parameters unherent in water molecules. The shape itself changes relative to the temperature and humidity in which it formed. The crystalline structure of water exhibits a six-sided symmetry ergo why snowflakes typically generate 6 nearly identical arms. Colder temperatures augment this standard and can result in triangular compositions. Additionally, even colder temperatures enable needles to form which are elongated columnar crystals which froze more rapidly. When the water is supersaturated with mineral content, the dendrtic branching occurs fractally relative to the external forces acting upon the planar object.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Nature's superior technology

This is a close up image of shark skin, which has been used as a model by Speedo to create swim suits that cut through water more efficiently.


Here is an image of a plant, known as a phyllotaxis (Greek for leaf arrangement). The pattern shows a naturally occurring mathematical relationship. This particular plant is a spiral phyllotaxis and it's pattern relates to Fibonacci's number.





This is a response to Drew's post. Last semester my group was looking into having our building perhapse breathe in some way, and as we were looking at lungs I found this great image in a book and scanned it in, and now lost it. At any rate, it was a drawing showing how the lung is basically a fractal in the way it continously breaks down and repeats itself. While looking into the lung thing, we started looking at fractals, and came across that broccoli. Heres some lungs and a fractal fern.