Chaos : making a new science / James Gleick.

By: Gleick, JamesMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: New York, N.Y., U.S.A. : Penguin, 1988, ©1987Description: xi, 352 pages, [10] pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cmISBN: 0140092501; 9780140092509Subject(s): Chaotic behavior in systems | Nonlinear DynamicsDDC classification: 003 LOC classification: Q172.5.C45 | G54 1988
Contents:
The butterfly effect -- Revolution -- Life's ups and downs -- A geometry of nature -- Strange attractors -- Universality -- The experimenter -- Images of chaos -- The dynamical systems collective -- Inner rhythms -- Chaos and beyond.
Summary: The author describes how scientists studying the growth of complexity in nature are discovering order and pattern in chaos. He explains concepts such as nonlinearity, the Butterfly Effect, universal constants, fractals, and strange attractors, and examines the work of scientists such as Mitchell J. Feigenbaum, Edward Lorenz, and Benoit Mandelbrot.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Namal Library
Computer Science
003 GLE-C 1987 10116 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 0010116
Total holds: 0
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001.6443 WEI-G 2004 1425 Graphics and animation basics / 001.9 UNS 1991 5554 Unsolved mysteries of the past. 001 ROZ-C 2004 5632 The complete idiot's guide to research methods / 003 GLE-C 1987 10116 Chaos : 003 IYE-O 2008 716 Operations research / 003 LAW-S 2000 12019 Simulation modeling and analysis / 003 NEW-N 2018 9972 Networks :

Includes bibliographical references (pages 318-340) and index.

The butterfly effect -- Revolution -- Life's ups and downs -- A geometry of nature -- Strange attractors -- Universality -- The experimenter -- Images of chaos -- The dynamical systems collective -- Inner rhythms -- Chaos and beyond.

The author describes how scientists studying the growth of complexity in nature are discovering order and pattern in chaos. He explains concepts such as nonlinearity, the Butterfly Effect, universal constants, fractals, and strange attractors, and examines the work of scientists such as Mitchell J. Feigenbaum, Edward Lorenz, and Benoit Mandelbrot.

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