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Friday, 23 May 2008 02:34 |
The Julia set J(c) is made of all points zj ,
which do not go to an attractor (it may be at infinity too) under iterations.
It is evident, that iterations of the points y =
fc(zj) do not go to an atractor too.
Therefore the Julia sets are invariant under fc .
The J-set is centrally symmetric since fc(z) =
z 2 + c is
an even function.
For z = r e if
the squared value is z 2 = r 2
e 2if. Therefore the map
fc wraps twice the complex plane z onto itself
(with quadratic deformation of r and displacement by c).
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| This is the simplest Julia set for c = 0 + 0i . As since
for | zo | < 1, zn converges to
the fixed point z = 0,
for | zo | > 1, zn go to infinity and
for | zo | = 1, zn rotates and
stays on the same circle | z | = 1 .
The circle is the Julia set J(0) .
It is evident, that the circle is invariant under fo =
z 2.
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The Julia sets self-similarity
Let f maps a point z1 into z2 =
f(z1). For small enough
ε it follows from the Taylor's theorem that
f(z1+ε)
= f(z1) + f '(z1)ε +
O(ε 2) ~ z2 + f '(z1) ε.
Sosmall neighbourhood of z1) is mapped
linearly (by scaling and rotation) into the z2 one.
Therefore the Julia set is self-similar in these regions.
As iterated preimages f o(-n)(z1) are everywhere
dense in J therefore J is self-similalar in every point.
In the applet below you can trace quadratic map dynamics.
The white square is mapped in the region with inverted colors.
You see thet Julia set is similar in both regions ("inverted" square
is deformed due to ~ε 2 and higher terms in the
Taylor's formula).
Controls: Drag the white square by mouse to move it.
Z are coordinates the white square center,
R is its size, dz is the scale of the visible region.
As ususal press <Enter> to set new parameters values. E.g. set
Cr=Ci=0 to test J(0) dynamics.
You can see below self-similarity of "dendrite" and "midgets" Julia sets.
More examples
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It is not difficult to imagine how f-1 maps points of the
J(-1) set from the Re(z) > 0 (or Im(z) > 0) half-plane
onto the whole J(-1).
Squaring "moves" J(-1) to the right (the lower picture) and after
addition of c = -1 the Julia set returns into its original position.
Note, that the two points a are mapped into one point a'.
Moreover for c = -1.77289 the biggest J(-1) midget located
at z = 0 (to the right below) in a similar way is mapped (twice) into
a small one (in the white square to the left). Renormalization theory and the
Julia midgets scaling will be discussed later.
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It is easy to see, that the "cauliflower" J(0.35) set has the same
"squaring" symmetry.
Two pictures below illustrate the squaring transformation for the Douady rabbit.
The line R-R cuts the creature in two symmetric halfs and each
part is mapped by fc into the whole J-set. Two points
R pass into R' one. A "unit" square is used instead of a circle.
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