Where Can I Find Resources to Study Peano Curves?

Ed Quanta
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Can anyone point me towards an online link or some books where I can study these bad boys? I am supposed to write like a 5-10 page paper on Peano curves in which I prove a few interesting things regarding them.
 
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Ed Quanta said:
Can anyone point me towards an online link or some books where I can study these bad boys? I am supposed to write like a 5-10 page paper on Peano curves in which I prove a few interesting things regarding them.

"Chaos and Fractals", by Peitgen, et.al. I quote:

"In Nature, the organization of space-filling structures is one of the fundamendal buliding blocks of living beings". You know, lungs, kidneys, vascular system. But I digress. Suppose you just want to prove how they fill the plane. Looks like a good N-epsilon proof. Like, for any (x,y) in the plane, curve comes epsilon distance away from it whenever the iteration is greater than N. Thus as N goes to infinity, distance goes to zero. Never proved it though. Suppose Peano and Hilbert did.
 


There are many great resources available online and in books for studying Peano curves. Here are a few suggestions to help you get started:

1. Online Links:
- The Wolfram MathWorld website has a comprehensive entry on Peano curves, including definitions, properties, and examples: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PeanoCurve.html
- The Cut the Knot website has a page dedicated to Peano curves, with interactive applets and visualizations to help you understand their construction: https://www.cut-the-knot.org/curriculum/Geometry/PeanoCurves.shtml
- The Plus Magazine website has an article on Peano curves that discusses their history and applications in computer graphics: https://plus.maths.org/content/peano-curves

2. Books:
- "The Fractal Geometry of Nature" by Benoit Mandelbrot is a classic text on fractals and includes a chapter on Peano curves.
- "The Beauty of Fractals" by Heinz-Otto Peitgen, Hartmut Jürgens, and Dietmar Saupe is another well-known book that covers Peano curves and other fractal constructions.
- "Fractals Everywhere" by Michael F. Barnsley is a popular introduction to fractal geometry and also includes a chapter on Peano curves.

I hope these resources will be helpful in your study of Peano curves. Best of luck with your paper!
 
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