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The Mandelbrot set is a famous example of a fractal.

A fractal is any pattern, that when seen as an image, produces a picture, which when zoomed into will still make the same picture. It can be cut into parts which look like a smaller version of the picture that was started with. The word fractal was made by Benoît Mandelbrot in 1975 from the Latin word fractus, which means "broken" or "fractured". A simple example is a tree that branches into smaller branches, and those branches into smaller branches and so on. Fractals have many practical applications.

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Fractals: The Geometry of Chaos - Christmas Lectures with Ian Stewart

Fractals: The Geometry of Chaos - Christmas Lectures with Ian Stewart
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