I thought I would try something different here. I appreciate all views and comments. Thanks for looking :) (Tierazon). ~Lori
*edit: please view full screen
You will be led to the knowledge of the internal things which are invisible to you, by the external things which you see before you. . . . Even so then, we can represent to ourselves in thought the Author of all that is, by contemplating and admiring the (visible) things which He has made, and ever brings into being.
- Hermes
Brilliant both in conception and execution. Oh, your idea and image, too, of course. I really like images which illustrate scientific/mathematical concepts beautifully and well. Even though it reminds me how much I've forgotten or never knew...
How did you make it? Is the image actually based on the relevant equations or did you just find a fractal that looks like iterations of the Lemniscate of Bernoulli? Just curious... where do you start? Or is it more where you ended up?
Always remember - Follow the Yellow Brick Road, it will lead you to the Emerald City and OZ A very nice place to repose. Trust me on this one, I live there. :-)................ MY GALLERY - THE LION****Another Site I'm AT - MY DA HOMEPAGE
Another blast from the past of M.C. Escher, Lori. I had to Google your title to remind myself what a lemniscate of Bernoulli was. For those of you viewing this one, the lemniscate is a specific shape in geometry that resembles the infinity symbol (∞). Lemniscate is latin and means "pendant ribbon." If you want to see how close a parallel to Escher's work Lori has achieved, Google "Swans" (1956) or Mobius Strip II (1963). It may take a little bit of study on your part but it's worth it; the lemniscate is there, just in a different pattern. Thanks for the opportunity to actually use my brain, Chicago. This one isn't the stunner many of your others are, but it's very unique and special in its own niche, unmatched as a study in interpretation.