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A common type of fractal dimension is the Hausdorff-Besicovich Dimension, but there are several different ways of computing fractal dimension.
Roughly, fractal dimension can be calculated by taking the limit of the quotient of the log change in object size and the log change in measurement scale, as the measurement scale approaches zero. The differences come in what is exactly meant by "object size" and what is meant by "measurement scale" and how to get an average number out of many different parts of a geometrical object. Fractal dimensions quantify the static *geometry* of an object.
For example, consider a straight line. Now blow up the line by a factor of two. The line is now twice as long as before. Log 2 / Log 2 = 1, corresponding to dimension 1. Consider a square. Now blow up the square by a factor of two. The square is now 4 times as large as before (i.e. 4 original squares can be placed on the original square). Log 4 / log 2 = 2, corresponding to dimension 2 for the square. Consider a snowflake curve formed by repeatedly replacing ___ with _/\_, where each of the 4 new lines is 1/3 the length of the old line. Blowing up the snowflake curve by a factor of 3 results in a snowflake curve 4 times as large (one of the old snowflake curves can be placed on each of the 4 segments _/\_). Log 4 / log 3 = 1.261... Since the dimension 1.261 is larger than the dimension 1 of the lines making up the curve, the snowflake curve is a fractal.
For more information on fractal dimension and scale, access via the WWW http://life.anu.edu.au/complex_systems/tutorial3.html .
many color and black and white photographs, high level math, and several
pseudocoded algorithms.
three fractal measurement algorithms for analysis of remote-sensing data.,
_Computers & Geosciences_ 19, 6 (July 1993), pp. 745-767.
0-471-53372-6 Discusses methods of computing fractal dimension. Includes
several short programs for nonlinear analysis.
of America A-Optics and Image Science_ 7, 6 (June 1990), pp. 1055-1073.
There are some programs available to compute fractal dimension. They are listed in a section below (see "Fractal software").
Topological dimension is the "normal" idea of dimension; a point has topological dimension 0, a line has topological dimension 1, a surface has topological dimension 2, etc.
For a rigorous definition:
A set has topological dimension 0 if every point has arbitrarily small neighborhoods whose boundaries do not intersect the set.
A set S has topological dimension k if each point in S has arbitrarily smallneighborhoods whose boundaries meet S in a set of dimension k-1, and k is the least nonnegative integer for which this holds.