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  • Slide 1
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by MEGAMENGER is an international distributed fractal building event taking place in locations all around the globe. Worlds Largest Fractal
  • Slide 2
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by This is one of our main build sites, where well be building a fractal called a Menger Sponge. This will join with other Menger Sponges around the world to form one giant, planet-spanning fractal!
  • Slide 3
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by A fractal is a shape which contains smaller copies of itself. Its self-similar. No matter how far you zoom in on a fractal, you will see the same pattern over and over. Whats a Fractal?
  • Slide 4
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Examples of Fractals: Sierpinski Triangle Images from Wikimedia Commons.
  • Slide 5
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by You might be wondering where mathematics comes into this but fractals are objects studied carefully by mathematicians. Modern science research involves all sorts of fractals. Wheres the Mathematics?
  • Slide 6
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Examples of Fractals: Mandelbrot Set Images from Wikimedia Commons.
  • Slide 7
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Fractals can be generated using iterative processes - the same process is repeated over and over again but on finer and finer scales. They naturally appear within dynamical systems theory, a hugely important area of maths which studies what future states follow from current states according to given evolution rules.
  • Slide 8
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Examples of Fractals: Dragon Curve Images from Wikimedia Commons.
  • Slide 9
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Researchers at Queen Mary University of London use fractals to study the movement of bodies in complicated systems. These concepts have applications to everything from the chaotic motion of molecules in fluids to the movement of foraging animals.
  • Slide 10
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Examples of Fractals: Koch Snowflake Images from Wikimedia Commons.
  • Slide 11
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by A Menger Sponge is a cube-shaped fractal made from twenty smaller cubes. What is a Menger Sponge?
  • Slide 12
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by This forms a cube with three holes through it. Twenty of those Menger cubes can be joined to make a bigger Menger Sponge, and so on. What is a Menger Sponge?
  • Slide 13
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by If the process is repeated to infinity, you obtain a true fractal. Sadly, you cannot have infinite detail in physical reality. But we have printed the Menger pattern down to the pixel level.
  • Slide 14
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by A Menger Sponge can be made by removing each central section all the way down. At each step the volume is reduced by 25.925%. This means that when youve removed infinitely many pieces, the remaining volume must be zero! Menger Facts
  • Slide 15
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by However, the surface area is increased each time you remove a section. This means that a true Menger Sponge has no volume but infinite surface area! If you wanted to paint it, youd never have enough paint to get into all the fiddly corners. Menger Facts
  • Slide 16
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by If you cut a slice through a Menger Sponge at just the right angle, you get a beautiful pattern of six-pointed stars! Menger Facts Image by user Geometrian at FractalForums.com
  • Slide 17
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Each Level 3 sponge measures around 1.5m/4.5ft tall, and weighs around 91kg/200lb. Menger Facts
  • Slide 18
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Instead of making our Menger Sponge by cutting holes in an existing cube, were starting with small cubes and building them together. Weve printed the cards with a picture of smaller and smaller cubes, so it looks like our cubes arent the smallest unit.
  • Slide 19
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Were building the internal structure from business cards. If we need six cards to make one cube, how many business cards do we need to make the Level 3 sponge?
  • Slide 20
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Level 2 400 cubes Menger Facts Level 1 20 cubes Level 4 MEGAMENGER 160,000 cubes Level 3 8,000 cubes
  • Slide 21
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Once weve built the internal structure, we cover the outside layer with printed cards. Overall we need around 1.3 million cards in all the worldwide locations. Menger Facts
  • Slide 22
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by Our Level 4 MEGAMENGER sponge will consist of Level 3, 2 and 1 cubes built in locations all around the world this week. Menger Facts
  • Slide 23
  • MEGAMENGER Supported by Resources by MEGAMENGER locations include: Menger Facts Manchester, UK Cambridge, UK Waterloo, Canada Auckland, New Zealand New York, USA San Francisco, USA Suzhou, China Tampere, Finland