Tuesday, December 17, 2013 1:30 pm
-
1:30 pm
EST (GMT -05:00)
MC 5158
Candidate
Jozsef Vass, Applied Math, University of Waterloo
Title
On
the
Geometry
of
IFS
Fractals
and
its
Applications
Abstract
Visually
complex
objects
with
infinitesimally
fine
features,
naturally
call
for
mathematical
representations.
The
geometrical
property
of
self-similarity
-
the
whole
similar
to
its
parts
-
when
iterated
to
infinity
generates
such
features.
Sets
of
affine
contractions
called
Iterated
Function
Systems
(IFS),
with
their
compact
attractors
IFS
fractals,
can
be
applied
to
represent
detailed
self-similar
shapes,
such
as
trees
or
mountains.
The
fine
local
features
of
such
attractors
prevent
their
straightforward
geometrical
handling,
and
often
imply
a
non-integer
Hausdorff
dimension.
The
main
goal
of
the
thesis
is
to
develop
an
alternative
approach
to
the
geometry
of
IFS
fractals
in
the
classical
sense
via
bounding
sets.
The
results
are
obtained
with
the
objective
of
practical
applicability.
The
thesis
revolves
around
a
central
problem,
the
determination
of
bounding
sets
-
and
the
convex
hull
in
particular
-
emphasizing
their
primary
role
in
IFS
Fractal
Geometry.
This
emphasis
is
supported
throughout
the
thesis,
from
real-life
and
theoretical
applications
to
numerical
algorithms
crucially
dependent
on
bounding.