The Koch snowflake (also known as the Koch curve, Koch star, or Koch island[1][2]) is a fractal curve and one of the earliest fractals to have been described. It is based on the Koch curve, which appeared in a 1904 paper titled "On a Continuous Curve Without Tangents, Constructible from Elementary Geometry"[3] by the Swedish mathematician Helge von Koch.

The first four iterations of the Koch snowflake
The first seven iterations in animation
Zooming into a vertex of the Koch curve
Zooming into a point that is not a vertex may cause the curve to rotate
Koch antisnowflake
First four iterations
Sixth iteration

The Koch snowflake can be built up iteratively, in a sequence of stages. The first stage is an equilateral triangle, and each successive stage is formed by adding outward bends to each side of the previous stage, making smaller equilateral triangles. The areas enclosed by the successive stages in the construction of the snowflake converge to times the area of the original triangle, while the perimeters of the successive stages increase without bound. Consequently, the snowflake encloses a finite area, but has an infinite perimeter.

The Koch snowflake has been constructed as an example of a continuous curve where drawing a tangent line to any point is impossible. Unlike the earlier Weierstrass function where the proof was purely analytical, the Koch snowflake was created to be possible to geometrically represent at the time, so that this property could also be seen through "naive intuition".[3]

Construction

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The Koch snowflake can be constructed by starting with an equilateral triangle, then recursively altering each line segment as follows:

  1. divide the line segment into three segments of equal length.
  2. draw an equilateral triangle that has the middle segment from step 1 as its base and points outward.
  3. remove the line segment that is the base of the triangle from step 2.

The first iteration of this process produces the outline of a hexagram.

The Koch snowflake is the limit approached as the above steps are followed indefinitely. The Koch curve originally described by Helge von Koch is constructed using only one of the three sides of the original triangle. In other words, three Koch curves make a Koch snowflake.

A Koch curve–based representation of a nominally flat surface can similarly be created by repeatedly segmenting each line in a sawtooth pattern of segments with a given angle.[4]

 
A fractal rough surface built from multiple Koch curve iterations

Properties

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Perimeter of the Koch snowflake

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Each iteration multiplies the number of sides in the Koch snowflake by four, so the number of sides after   iterations is given by:

 

If the original equilateral triangle has sides of length  , the length of each side of the snowflake after   iterations is:

 

an inverse power of three multiple of the original length. The perimeter of the snowflake after   iterations is:

 

The Koch curve has an infinite length, because the total length of the curve increases by a factor of   with each iteration. Each iteration creates four times as many line segments as in the previous iteration, with the length of each one being   the length of the segments in the previous stage. Hence, the length of the curve after   iterations will be   times the original triangle perimeter and is unbounded, as   tends to infinity.

Limit of perimeter

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As the number of iterations tends to infinity, the limit of the perimeter is:

 

since  .

An  -dimensional measure exists, but has not been calculated so far. Only upper and lower bounds have been invented.[clarification needed] [5]

Area of the Koch snowflake

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In each iteration a new triangle is added on each side of the previous iteration, so the number of new triangles added in iteration   is:

 

The area of each new triangle added in an iteration is   of the area of each triangle added in the previous iteration, so the area of each triangle added in iteration   is:

 

where   is the area of the original triangle. The total new area added in iteration   is therefore:

 

The total area of the snowflake after   iterations is:

 

Collapsing the geometric sum gives:

 

Limits of area

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The limit of the area is:

 

since  .

Thus, the area of the Koch snowflake is   of the area of the original triangle. Expressed in terms of the side length   of the original triangle, this is:[6]  

Solid of revolution

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The volume of the solid of revolution of the Koch snowflake about an axis of symmetry of the initiating equilateral triangle of unit side is  [7]

Other properties

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The Koch snowflake is self-replicating with six smaller copies surrounding one larger copy at the center. Hence, it is an irrep-7 irrep-tile (see Rep-tile for discussion).

The fractal dimension of the Koch curve is  . This is greater than that of a line ( ) but less than that of Peano's space-filling curve ( ).

It is impossible to draw a tangent line to any point of the curve.

Representation as a de Rham curve

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The Koch curve arises as a special case of a de Rham curve. The de Rham curves are mappings of Cantor space into the plane, usually arranged so as to form a continuous curve. Every point on a continuous de Rham curve corresponds to a real number in the unit interval. For the Koch curve, the tips of the snowflake correspond to the dyadic rationals: each tip can be uniquely labeled with a distinct dyadic rational.

Tessellation of the plane

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Tessellation by two sizes of Koch snowflake

It is possible to tessellate the plane by copies of Koch snowflakes in two different sizes. However, such a tessellation is not possible using only snowflakes of one size. Since each Koch snowflake in the tessellation can be subdivided into seven smaller snowflakes of two different sizes, it is also possible to find tessellations that use more than two sizes at once.[8] Koch snowflakes and Koch antisnowflakes of the same size may be used to tile the plane.

Thue–Morse sequence and turtle graphics

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A turtle graphic is the curve that is generated if an automaton is programmed with a sequence. If the Thue–Morse sequence members are used in order to select program states:

  • If  , move ahead by one unit,
  • If  , rotate counterclockwise by an angle of  ,

the resulting curve converges to the Koch snowflake.

Representation as Lindenmayer system

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The Koch curve can be expressed by the following rewrite system (Lindenmayer system):

Alphabet : F
Constants : +, −
Axiom : F
Production rules:
F → F+F--F+F

Here, F means "draw forward", - means "turn right 60°", and + means "turn left 60°".

To create the Koch snowflake, one would use F--F--F (an equilateral triangle) as the axiom.

Variants of the Koch curve

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Following von Koch's concept, several variants of the Koch curve were designed, considering right angles (quadratic), other angles (Cesàro), circles and polyhedra and their extensions to higher dimensions (Sphereflake and Kochcube, respectively)

Variant (dimension, angle) Illustration Construction
≤1D, 60-90° angle  
Cesàro fractal (85°)
The Cesàro fractal is a variant of the Koch curve with an angle between 60° and 90°.[citation needed]
 
First four iterations of a Cesàro antisnowflake (four 60° curves arranged in a 90° square)
≈1.46D, 90° angle  
Quadratic type 1 curve
 
First two iterations
1.5D, 90° angle  
Quadratic type 2 curve
Minkowski Sausage[9]
 
First two iterations. Its fractal dimension equals   and is exactly half-way between dimension 1 and 2. It is therefore often chosen when studying the physical properties of non-integer fractal objects.
≤2D, 90° angle  
Third iteration
Minkowski Island
 
Four quadratic type 2 curves arranged in a square
≈1.37D, 90° angle  
Quadratic flake
 
4 quadratic type 1 curves arranged in a polygon: First two iterations. Known as the "Minkowski Sausage",[10][11][12] its fractal dimension equals  .[13]
≤2D, 90° angle  
Quadratic antiflake
Anticross-stitch curve, the quadratic flake type 1, with the curves facing inwards instead of outwards (Vicsek fractal)
≈1.49D, 90° angle  
Quadratic Cross
Another variation. Its fractal dimension equals  .
≤2D, 90° angle  
Quadratic island[14]
 
Quadratic curve, iterations 0, 1, and 2; dimension of  
≤2D, 60° angle  
von Koch surface
 
First three iterations of a natural extension of the Koch curve in two dimensions.
≤2D, 90° angle  
First (blue block), second (plus green blocks), third (plus yellow blocks) and fourth (plus transparent blocks) iterations of the type 1 3D Koch quadratic fractal
Extension of the quadratic type 1 curve. The illustration at left shows the fractal after the second iteration
 
Animation quadratic surface
≤3D, any  
Koch curve in 3D
A three-dimensional fractal constructed from Koch curves. The shape can be considered a three-dimensional extension of the curve in the same sense that the Sierpiński pyramid and Menger sponge can be considered extensions of the Sierpinski triangle and Sierpinski carpet. The version of the curve used for this shape uses 85° angles.

Squares can be used to generate similar fractal curves. Starting with a unit square and adding to each side at each iteration a square with dimension one third of the squares in the previous iteration, it can be shown that both the length of the perimeter and the total area are determined by geometric progressions. The progression for the area converges to   while the progression for the perimeter diverges to infinity, so as in the case of the Koch snowflake, we have a finite area bounded by an infinite fractal curve.[15] The resulting area fills a square with the same center as the original, but twice the area, and rotated by   radians, the perimeter touching but never overlapping itself.

The total area covered at the  th iteration is:  

while the total length of the perimeter is:   which approaches infinity as   increases.

Functionalisation

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Graph of the Koch's function

In addition to the curve, the paper by Helge von Koch that has established the Koch curve shows a variation of the curve as an example of a continuous everywhere yet nowhere differentiable function that was possible to represent geometrically at the time. From the base straight line, represented as AB, the graph can be drawn by recursively applying the following on each line segment:

  • Divide the line segment (XY) into three parts of equal length, divided by dots C and E.
  • Draw a line DM, where M is the middle point of CE, and DM is perpendicular to the initial base of AB, having the length of  .
  • Draw the lines CD and DE and erase the lines CE and DM.

Each point of AB can be shown to converge to a single height. If   is defined as the distance of that point to the initial base, then   as a function is continuous everywhere and differentiable nowhere.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Addison, Paul S. (1997). Fractals and Chaos: An Illustrated Course. Institute of Physics. p. 19. ISBN 0-7503-0400-6.
  2. ^ Lauwerier, Hans (1991). Fractals: Endlessly Repeated Geometrical Figures. Translated by Gill-Hoffstädt, Sophia. Princeton University Press. p. 36. ISBN 0-691-02445-6. Mandelbrot called this a Koch island.
  3. ^ a b c von Koch, Helge (1904). "Sur une courbe continue sans tangente, obtenue par une construction géométrique élémentaire". Arkiv för matematik, astronomi och fysik (in French). 1: 681–704. JFM 35.0387.02.
  4. ^ Alonso-Marroquin, F.; Huang, P.; Hanaor, D.; Flores-Johnson, E.; Proust, G.; Gan, Y.; Shen, L. (2015). "Static friction between rigid fractal surfaces" (PDF). Physical Review E. 92 (3): 032405. Bibcode:2015PhRvE..92c2405A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.92.032405. hdl:2123/13835. PMID 26465480. — Study of fractal surfaces using Koch curves.
  5. ^ Zhu, Zhi Wei; Zhou, Zuo Ling; Jia, Bao Guo (October 2003). "On the Lower Bound of the Hausdorff Measure of the Koch Curve". Acta Mathematica Sinica. 19 (4): 715–728. doi:10.1007/s10114-003-0310-2. S2CID 122517792.
  6. ^ "Koch Snowflake". ecademy.agnesscott.edu.
  7. ^ McCartney, Mark (2020-04-16). "The area, centroid and volume of revolution of the Koch curve". International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology. 52 (5): 782–786. doi:10.1080/0020739X.2020.1747649. ISSN 0020-739X. S2CID 218810213.
  8. ^ Burns, Aidan (1994). "Fractal tilings". Mathematical Gazette. 78 (482): 193–6. doi:10.2307/3618577. JSTOR 3618577. S2CID 126185324..
  9. ^ Paul S. Addison, Fractals and Chaos: An illustrated course, p. 19, CRC Press, 1997 ISBN 0849384435.
  10. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. (1999). "Minkowski Sausage", archive.lib.msu.edu. Accessed: 21 September 2019.
  11. ^ Pamfilos, Paris. "Minkowski Sausage", user.math.uoc.gr/~pamfilos/. Accessed: 21 September 2019.
  12. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Minkowski Sausage". MathWorld. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  13. ^ Mandelbrot, B. B. (1983). The Fractal Geometry of Nature, p.48. New York: W. H. Freeman. ISBN 9780716711865. Cited in Weisstein, Eric W. "Minkowski Sausage". MathWorld. Retrieved 22 September 2019..
  14. ^ Appignanesi, Richard; ed. (2006). Introducing Fractal Geometry. Icon. ISBN 978-1840467-13-0.
  15. ^ Demonstrated by James McDonald in a public lecture at KAUST University on January 27, 2013. "KAUST | Academics | Winter Enrichment Program". Archived from the original on 2013-01-12. Retrieved 2013-01-29. retrieved 29 January 2013.

Further reading

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External videos
  Koch Snowflake Fractal
Khan Academy