Portal:Mathematics/Featured picture archive

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This page is an archive of pictures featured on the Mathematics Portal. For mathematics pictures featured elsewhere on Wikipedia see Wikipedia:Featured pictures#Mathematics.

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Contents

[edit] May, 2008

The Riemann zeta function along the critical line, all complex numbers with a real part of a half. That is, it is a graph of \Re(\zeta(it+1/2)) versus \Im(\zeta(it+1/2)) for real values of t running from 0 to 34. The first five zeros in the critical strip are clearly visible as the place where the spirals pass through the origin. The zeros of the Riemann zeta function are central to the Riemann hypothesis.

[edit] April, 2008

The normal distribution, also called the Laplace-Gaussian distribution, is an important family of continuous probability distributions, applicable in many fields. The importance of the normal distribution as a model of quantitative phenomena in the natural and behavioral sciences is due to the central limit theorem. Many psychological measurements and physical phenomena (like noise) can be approximated well by the normal distribution. A common example is the intelligence quotient (IQ), seen above.

[edit] March, 2008

Spherical geometry is the geometry of the two-dimensional surface of a sphere. It is an example of a non-Euclidean geometry. Two practical applications of the principles of spherical geometry are navigation and astronomy. On a sphere, the sum of the angles of a triangle is not equal to 180°.

[edit] February, 2008

Moebiusband wikipedia animation.ogg
Click play to see animation

The Möbius strip is a surface with only one side and only one boundary component. It has the mathematical property of being non-orientable. It is also a ruled surface.

[edit] January, 2008

In complex dynamics, the Julia set of a holomorphic function informally consists of those points whose long-time behavior under repeated iteration of f\, can change drastically under arbitrarily small perturbations. Above is a 3D slice of a 4D Julia set.

[edit] December, 2007

Borromean rings consist of three topological circles which are linked and form a Brunnian link. Put more simply removing any ring results in two unlinked rings.

[edit] November, 2007

Leonardo da Vinci's illustrations in De Divina Proportione (On the Divine Proportion) and his views that some bodily proportions exhibit the golden ratio have led some scholars to speculate that he incorporated the golden ratio in his own paintings. Some suggest that his Mona Lisa, for example, employs the golden ratio in its geometric equivalents.

[edit] October, 2007

An attractor is a set to which a dynamical system evolves after a long enough time. That is, points that get close enough to the attractor remain close even if slightly disturbed.

[edit] September, 2007

A triangle in three different geometries. The top is a spherical triangle in spherical geometry, the middle shows a hyperbolic triangle in hyperbolic geometry and the bottom is a triangle in Euclidian geometry.

[edit] August, 2007

Credit: User:Ixnay

In compass and straightedge constructions an angle can be bisected, divided evenly into two, using only an unmarked ruler and a compass as seen above. Many tried and failed to trisect a general angle; Gauss proved it impossible.

[edit] July, 2007

Partial view of the Mandelbrot set, step 7 of a sequence of pictures showing increasing levels of zoom. Each of the crowns consists of similar "seahorse tails".

[edit] June, 2007

Zooming in on the Mandelbrot set
Credit: de:Benutzer:AlterVista

This animation shows a zoom sequence in the fractal known as the Mandelbrot set. Fractals such as this contain an infinite amount of detail.

[edit] May, 2007

Mug and torus
Credit: User:Kieff

It is often suggested that a topologist cannot tell the difference between a coffee cup and a doughnut. This is because these objects when thought of as topological spaces are homeomorphic. The above picture depicts a continuous deformation of a coffee cup into a doughnut such that at each stage the object is homeomorphic to the original.

[edit] April, 2007

Collatz fractal
Credit: User:Pokipsy76

An escape-time fractal, similar to the famous Mandelbrot set, associated with the Collatz conjecture shown near the real axis.

[edit] March, 2007

tesseract
Credit: Jason Hise

A 3D projection of a rotating tesseract, the 4D version of the cube, and one of the six convex regular polychora. These are the four-dimensional analogs of the Platonic solids (in three dimensions) and the regular polygons (in two dimensions).

[edit] February, 2007

Circle map
Credit: User:Koenb

A wireframe model of an icosahedron, one of the five Platonic solids. The icosahedron is the dual of the dodecahedron.

[edit] January, 2007

Circle map
Credit: User:AugPi

The Morin surface is a half-way model of a particular sphere eversion (turning a sphere inside out in 3-space, allowing self-intersection but no creasing). It is named after its discoverer, Bernard Morin.

[edit] December, 2006

Circle map
Credit: Linas Vepstas

The circle map is a chaotic map showing a number of interesting chaotic behaviors. This figure shows the average Poincaré recurrence time for the iterated circle map modulo 1.

[edit] November 08, 2006

Klein bottle
Credit: Fropuff

A Klein bottle, an example of a surface that is non-orientable — one with no distinction between the "inside" and "outside".

[edit] October 22, 2006

Penrose tiling

A Penrose tiling, an example of a tiling that can completely cover an infinite plane, but only in a pattern which is non-repeating (aperiodic).

[edit] August 24, 2006

Constructing a golden rectangle

This is the method of constructing a golden rectangle with a compass and straightedge.

[edit] August 10, 2006

A dodecahedron

A dodecahedron is any polyhedron with twelve faces, but usually a regular dodecahedron is meant: a Platonic solid composed of twelve regular pentagonal faces, with three meeting at each vertex.

[edit] May 31, 2006

A tesseract

The tesseract, also known as a hypercube, is the 4-dimensional analog of the cube. That is, the tesseract is to the cube as the cube is to the square

[edit] March 25, 2006

Pictures of all the connected Dynkin diagrams

These are all the connected Dynkin diagrams, which classify the irreducible root systems, which themselves classify simple complex Lie algebras and simple complex Lie groups. These diagrams are therefore fundamental throughout Lie group theory.

[edit] February 2, 2006

The Lorenz attractor is a non-linear dynamical system derived from the simplified equations of convection rolls in certain atmospheric equations. For a certain set of parameters the system exhibits chaotic behavior and forms what is called a strange attractor.

[edit] January 4, 2006

A logarithmic spiral is a special kind of spiral curve which often appears in nature. This is a cutaway of a Nautilus shell showing the chambers arranged in an approximately logarithmic spiral.

[edit] December 15, 2005

A cuboctahedron is a polyhedron and an Archimedean solid. It is quasi-regular because although its faces are not all identical, its vertices and edges are. It gets its name from the fact that it is both a rectified cube and a rectified octahedron.

[edit] July 17, 2005

Part of the Mandelbrot set, an example of fractal geometry described by dynamical systems.

[edit] March 2, 2005

This picture shows the four conic sections: Circles, Ellipses, Parabolas, and Hyperbolas.

[edit] February 12, 2005

This fractal, a Buddhabrot iteration, is believed by many to have a resemblance to the Buddha. The fractal is special rendering of the Mandelbrot set, discovered by Benoît Mandelbrot.

[edit] February 10, 2005

This fractal, one of the most famous fractals in mathematics, is part of the Mandelbrot set, discovered by Benoît Mandelbrot.