Discover the Mysteries of the Koch Snowflake Area with Expert Math Help"

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on calculating the area of the Koch Snowflake using a specific formula that incorporates an infinite geometric series. The formula presented is: (√3)/4 + [(√3/12) * (1 - (4/9)^s)] / (1 - 4/9), where s represents the stage of the fractal. Participants clarify the derivation of the geometric series component, confirming that it sums from i=0 to n-1 of (4/9)^i. The final expression for the area is simplified to (√3 + (3√3/4)(1 - (4/9)^s)) / 4.

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  • Understanding of infinite geometric series
  • Familiarity with fractals, specifically the Koch Snowflake
  • Basic knowledge of algebraic manipulation
  • Ability to interpret mathematical notation and equations
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  • Explore the derivation of the Koch Snowflake area formula
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Euphoriet
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I'm trying to find the area for the Koch Snowflake... I can't really figure it out... I found a couple of equations online (I can't really understand how most work.. or how they have been "derived".. including the mathworld one)

I'm looking at the following formula (seems to work.. but I can't figure out the (1-(4/9)^n)/(1-4/9) part.. something to do with an infinite geometric series right?
---
Equation:

(sqr(3))/4) + [ ((sqr(3)/12 )) * (1-(4/9)^s)) ] / (1-4/9)

(sorry I could not figure out the pretty print stuff either.)
s = stage of snowflake/fractal, starting from 0
 
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oops.. sorry about the other thread.. oh well
 
Euphoriet said:
I'm trying to find the area for the Koch Snowflake... I can't really figure it out... I found a couple of equations online (I can't really understand how most work.. or how they have been "derived".. including the mathworld one)

I'm looking at the following formula (seems to work.. but I can't figure out the (1-(4/9)^n)/(1-4/9) part.. something to do with an infinite geometric series right?
Yes, that is the sum, from i= 0 to n-1, of (4/9)^i

---
Equation:

(sqr(3))/4) + [ ((sqr(3)/12 )) * (1-(4/9)^s)) ] / (1-4/9)

(sorry I could not figure out the pretty print stuff either.)
s = stage of snowflake/fractal, starting from 0
Uh, that's not an equation! There is no "=". I'm not sure what you want to do with it. Add the two fractions? If so, then, of course, 1- 4/9= 5/9 so "(1-(4/9)^s/(1- 4/9)" is
\frac{1-\left(\frac{4}{9}\right)^s}{1- \frac{4}{9}}= \frac{1-\left(\frac{4}{9}\right)^s}{5/9}= \frac{9(1-\left(\frac{4}{9}\right)^s)}{4}
I come out with, for the whole thing,
\frac{\sqrt{3}+ \frac{3\sqrt{3}}{4}\left(1- \frac{4}{9}\right)^s}{4}

Double click on the "pretty print" (Latex) to see the code.
 

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