IOP Publishing Ltd, 1997. — 306 p. The aim of this textbook is to provide the reader with an elementary introduction to fractal geometry and chaotic dynamics. These are subjects which have attracted immense interest throughout the whole range of numerate disciplines, including science, engineering, medicine, economics, and social science, to name but a few. The book may be used...
Cambridge University Press, 2006. — 464 p. The chaos game. Attractors of iterated function systems. Another chaos game. Codes, metrics and topologies. Points and spaces. Functions, mappings and transformations. Addresses and code spaces. Metric spaces. Metrics on code space. Cauchy sequences, limits and continuity. Topological spaces. Important basic topologies. Some key...
2nd ed. — Morgan Kaufmann, 2000. — 534 p. This volume is the second edition of the highly successful Fractals Everywhere. The Focus of this text is how fractal geometry can be used to model real objects in the physical world. This edition of Fractals Everywhere is the most up-to-date fractal textbook available today. Fractals Everywhere may be supplemented by Michael F....
Westview Press, 2003. - 384 pages.
Contains a selection of the classical mathematical papers related to fractal geometry. Commentaries help the modern reader to understand the papers and their relation to modern work. Fractals are an important topic in such varied branches of science as mathematics, computer science, and physics. Classics on Fractals collects for the first time...
Wiley. Chichester, UK. 3rd Edition. 2014. 400 pages. Includes references and index.
ISBN: 111994239X.
The seminal text on fractal geometry for students and researchers: extensively revised and updated with new material, notes and references that reflect recent directions. Interest in fractal geometry continues to grow rapidly, both as a subject that is fascinating in its own...
Second Edition. — VCH, 1994. — 453 Pages. — ISBN: 3527290788. Fractal geometry is revolutionizing the descriptive mathematics of applied materials systems. Rather than presenting a mathematical treatise, Brian Kaye demonstrates the descriptive power of fractal geometry in describing materials ranging from Swiss cheese to pyrolytic graphite. The second edition of this successful...