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Julia Set
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Let R(z) be a rational function

 R(z)=(P(z))/(Q(z)),
(1)

where z in C^*, C^* is the Riemann sphere C union {infty}, and P and Q are polynomials without common divisors. The "filled-in" Julia set J_R is the set of points z which do not approach infinity after R(z) is repeatedly applied (corresponding to a strange attractor). The true Julia set J is the boundary of the filled-in set (the set of "exceptional points"). There are two types of Julia sets: connected sets (Fatou set) and Cantor sets (Fatou dust).

JuliaSets

Quadratic Julia sets are generated by the quadratic mapping

 z_(n+1)=z_n^2+c
(2)

for fixed c. For almost every c, this transformation generates a fractal. Examples are shown above for various values of c. The resulting object is not a fractal for c=-2 (Dufner et al. 1998, pp. 224-226) and c=0 (Dufner et al. 1998, pp. 125-126), although it does not seem to be known if these two are the only such exceptional values.

DendriteFractal
DouadysRabbitFractal
SanMarcoFractal
SiegelDisk

The special case of c=i on the boundary of the Mandelbrot set is called a dendrite fractal (top left figure), c=-0.123+0.745i is called Douady's rabbit fractal (top right figure), c=-0.75 is called the San Marco fractal (bottom left figure), and c=-0.391-0.587i is the Siegel disk fractal (bottom right figure).

The equation for the quadratic Julia set is a conformal mapping, so angles are preserved. Let J be the Julia set, then x^'|->x leaves J invariant. If a point P is on J, then all its iterations are on J. The transformation has a two-valued inverse. If b=0 and y is started at 0, then the map is equivalent to the logistic map. The set of all points for which J is connected is known as the Mandelbrot set.

For a Julia set J_c with c<<1, the capacity dimension is

 d_(capacity)=1+(|c|^2)/(4ln2)+O(|c|^3).
(3)

For small c, J_c is also a Jordan curve, although its points are not computable.

SEE ALSO: Dendrite Fractal, Douady's Rabbit Fractal, Fatou Dust, Fatou Set, Mandelbrot Set, Newton's Method, San Marco Fractal, Siegel Disk Fractal, Strange Attractor

REFERENCES:

Dickau, R. M. "Julia Sets." http://mathforum.org/advanced/robertd/julias.html.

Dickau, R. M. "Another Method for Calculating Julia Sets." http://mathforum.org/advanced/robertd/inversejulia.html.

Douady, A. "Julia Sets and the Mandelbrot Set." In The Beauty of Fractals: Images of Complex Dynamical Systems (Ed. H.-O. Peitgen and D. H. Richter). Berlin: Springer-Verlag, p. 161, 1986.

Dufner, J.; Roser, A.; and Unseld, F. Fraktale und Julia-Mengen. Harri Deutsch, 1998.

Lauwerier, H. Fractals: Endlessly Repeated Geometric Figures. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, pp. 124-126, 138-148, and 177-179, 1991.

Mendes-France, M. "Nevertheless." Math. Intell. 10, 35, 1988.

Peitgen, H.-O. and Saupe, D. (Eds.). "The Julia Set," "Julia Sets as Basin Boundaries," "Other Julia Sets," and "Exploring Julia Sets." §3.3.2 to 3.3.5 in The Science of Fractal Images. New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 152-163, 1988.

Schroeder, M. Fractals, Chaos, Power Laws. New York: W. H. Freeman, p. 39, 1991.

Wagon, S. "Julia Sets." §5.4 in Mathematica in Action. New York: W. H. Freeman, pp. 163-178, 1991.

Wells, D. The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry. London: Penguin, pp. 126-127, 1991.




CITE THIS AS:

Weisstein, Eric W. "Julia Set." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/JuliaSet.html

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