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Benoit Mandelbrot Mandelbrot saw that apparently random shapes followed
patterns
Benoit Mandelbrot, who discovered mathematical shapes known as fractals, has
died of cancer at the age of 85.
Mandelbrot, who had joint French and US nationality, developed fractals as a
mathematical way of understanding the infinite complexity of nature.
The concept has been used to measure coastlines, clouds and other natural
phenomena and had far-reaching effects in physics, biology and astronomy.
Mandelbrot's family said he had died in a hospice in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
The visionary mathematician was born into a Jewish family in Poland but moved
to Paris at the age of 11 to escape the Nazis.
He spent most of his life in the US, working for IBM computers and eventually
became a professor of mathematical science at Yale University.
His seminal works, Fractals: Form, Chance and Dimension and The Fractal
Geometry of Nature, were published in 1977 and 1982. In these, he argued that
seemingly random mathematical shapes in fact followed a pattern if broken down
into a single repeating shape.
The concept enabled scientists to measure previously immeasurable objects,
including the coastline of the British Isles, the geometry of a lung or a
cauliflower.
"If you cut one of the florets of a cauliflower, you see the whole cauliflower
but smaller," he explained at the influential Technology Entertainment and
Design (TED) conference earlier this year.
"Then you cut again, again, again, and you still get small cauliflowers. So
there are some shapes which have this peculiar property, where each part is
like the whole, but smaller."
'Powerful mind'
Fractal mathematics also led to technological developments in the fields of
digital music and image compression.
It has also been influential in pop culture, with the patterns being used to
create beautiful and intricate pieces of art. One such design is named in his
honour.
Mandelbrot was also highly critical of the world banking system, arguing the
economic model it used was unable to cope with its own complexity.
In a statement, French President Nicolas Sarkozy praised Mandelbrot for his
"powerful, original mind that never shied away from innovation and battering
preconceived ideas".
"His work, which was entirely developed outside the main research channels, led
to a modern information theory," he said.