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Natural Patterns


Natural patterns are fantastic

mathematical patterns are frequent in nature

4.71/5 (189)



Patterns in Nature

Natural patterns are visible regular forms found in the natural world. The patterns can sometimes be modeled mathematically and they include symmetries, trees, spirals, meanders, waves, foams, tessellations, cracks, and stripes.

Mathematics, physics, and chemistry can explain patterns in nature at different levels. Patterns in living things express the underlying biological processes. Studies of pattern formation make use of computer models to simulate a wide range of patterns.

In 1202, Leonardo Fibonacci introduced the Fibonacci number sequence. It turns out that simple equations involving the Fibonacci numbers can describe most of the complex spiral growth patterns found in nature.

The Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau (1801–1883) formulated the mathematical problem of the existence of a minimal surface with a given boundary, which is now named after him. He studied soap films intensively and formulated Plateau’s laws, which describe the structures formed by films in foams.

The German psychologist Adolf Zeising (1810–1876) claimed that the golden ratio was expressed in the arrangement of plant parts, in the skeletons of animals and the branching patterns of their veins and nerves, as well as in the geometry of crystals.

Ernst Haeckel (1834–1919) painted beautiful illustrations of marine organisms, in particular Radiolaria, emphasizing their symmetry to support his faux-Darwinian theories of evolution.

The American photographer Wilson Bentley (1865–1931) took the first micrograph of a snowflake in 1885.

D’Arcy Thompson pioneered the study of growth and form in his 1917 book.

In 1952, Alan Turing (1912–1954), better known for his work on computing and codebreaking, wrote The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis, an analysis of the mechanisms that would be needed to create patterns in living organisms, in the process called morphogenesis. He predicted oscillating chemical reactions, in particular the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction. These activator-inhibitor mechanisms can, Turing suggested, generate patterns of stripes and spots in animals, and contribute to the spiral patterns seen in plant phyllotaxis.

In 1968, the Hungarian theoretical biologist Aristid Lindenmayer (1925–1989) developed the L-system, a formal grammar that can be used to model plant growth patterns in the style of fractals. L-systems have an alphabet of symbols that can be combined using production rules to build larger strings of symbols, and a mechanism for translating the generated strings into geometric structures. In 1975, after centuries of the slow development of the mathematics of patterns by Gottfried Leibniz, Georg Cantor, Helge von Koch (the Koch snowflake), Wacław Sierpiński, and others, Benoît Mandelbrot wrote a famous paper, How Long Is the Coast of Britain? Statistical Self-Similarity and Fractional Dimension, crystallizing mathematical thought into the concept of the fractal and the Mandelbrot set.

Here is a video on fractals

Causes

Living things like orchids, hummingbirds, and the peacock’s tail have abstract designs with a beauty of form, pattern, and color that artists struggle to match. The beauty that people perceive in nature has caused at different levels, notably in the mathematics that governs what patterns can physically form, and among living things in the effects of natural selection, which govern how patterns evolve.

Mathematics seeks to discover and explain abstract patterns or regularities of all kinds. Visual patterns in nature find explanations in chaos theory, fractals, logarithmic spirals, topology, and other mathematical patterns. For example, L-systems form convincing models of different patterns of tree growth.

The laws of physics apply the abstractions of mathematics to the real world, often as if it were perfect. For example, a crystal is perfect when it has no structural defects such as dislocations and is fully symmetric. Exact mathematical perfection can only approximate real objects. Visible patterns in nature are governed by physical laws; for example, meanders can be explained using fluid dynamics.

In biology, natural selection can cause the development of patterns in living things for several reasons, including camouflage, sexual selection, and different kinds of signaling, including mimicry and cleaning symbiosis. In plants, the shapes, colors, and patterns of insect-pollinated flowers like the lily have evolved to attract insects such as bees. Radial patterns of colors and stripes, some visible only in ultraviolet light serve as nectar guides that can be seen at a distance.

Here is a video on the importance of mathematics in deciphering the natural world

Types of pattern

Symmetry

Symmetry is pervasive in living things. Animals mainly have bilateral or mirror symmetry, as do the leaves of plants and some flowers such as orchids. Animals that move in one direction necessarily have upper and lower sides, head and tail ends, and therefore a left and a right. The head becomes specialized with a mouth and sense organs (cephalization), and the body becomes bilaterally symmetric (though internal organs need not be).

Plants often have radial or rotational symmetry, as do many flowers and some groups of animals such as sea anemones.

Rotational symmetry is also found at different scales among non-living things including the crown-shaped splash pattern formed when a drop falls into a pond, and both the spheroidal shape and rings of a planet like Saturn.

Radial symmetry suits organisms like sea anemones whose adults do not move: food and threats may arrive from any direction.

Fivefold symmetry is found in the echinoderms, the group that includes starfish, sea urchins, and sea lilies. The reason for the fivefold (penta-radiate) symmetry of the echinoderms is puzzling. Early echinoderms were bilaterally symmetrical, as their larvae still are. Sumrall and Wray argue that the loss of the old symmetry had both developmental and ecological causes.

Among non-living things, snowflakes have striking sixfold symmetry: each flake’s structure forms a record of the varying conditions during its crystallization, with nearly the same pattern of growth on each of its six arms.

Crystals in general have a variety of symmetries and crystal habits; they can be cubic or octahedral, but true crystals cannot have fivefold symmetry (unlike quasicrystals).

Mirror symmetry

Threefold Symmetry

Fourfold Symmetry

Fivefold Symmetry

Sixfold Symmetry

Rotational symmetry





Trees, fractals

Fractals are infinitely self-similar, iterated mathematical constructs having fractal dimensions. Infinite iteration is not possible in nature so all ‘fractal’ patterns are only approximate.

For example, the leaves of ferns and umbellifers (Apiaceae) are only self-similar (pinnate) to 2, 3, or 4 levels.

Fern-like growth patterns occur in plants and in animals including bryozoa, corals, hydrozoa like the air fern, Sertularia argentea, and in non-living things, notably electrical discharges.

Lindenmayer system fractals can model different patterns of tree growth by varying a small number of parameters including branching angle, the distance between nodes or branch points (internode length), and the number of branches per branch point.

Fractal-like patterns occur widely in nature, in phenomena as diverse as clouds, river networks, geologic fault lines, mountains, coastlines, animal coloration, snowflakes, crystals, blood vessel branching, and ocean waves.

Spirals

Spirals are common in plants and in some animals, notably mollusks.

For example, in the nautilus, a cephalopod mollusk, each chamber of its shell is an approximate copy of the next one, scaled by a constant factor and arranged in a logarithmic spiral. Given a modern understanding of fractals, a growth spiral can be seen as a special case of self-similarity.

Plant spirals can be seen in phyllotaxis, the arrangement of leaves on a stem, and in the arrangement (parastichy) of other parts as in composite flower heads and seed heads like the sunflower or fruit structures like the pineapple and snake fruit, as well as in the pattern of scales in pine cones, where multiple spirals run both clockwise and anticlockwise. These arrangements have explanations at different levels – mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology – each individually correct, but all necessary together.

Phyllotaxis spirals can be generated mathematically from Fibonacci ratios: the Fibonacci sequence runs 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13… (each subsequent number being the sum of the two preceding ones). For example, when leaves alternate up a stem, one rotation of the spiral touches two leaves, so the pattern or ratio is 1/2. In hazel the ratio is 1/3; in apricot, it is 2/5; in pear, it is 3/8; in almond, it is 5/13.

In disc phyllotaxis as in the sunflower and daisy, the florets are arranged in Fermat’s spiral with Fibonacci numbering, at least when the flowerhead is mature so all the elements are the same size.

Fibonacci ratios approximate the golden angle, 137.508°, which governs the curvature of Fermat’s spiral.

From the point of view of physics, spirals are the lowest-energy configurations that emerge spontaneously through self-organizing processes in dynamic systems. From the point of view of chemistry, a spiral can be generated by a reaction-diffusion process, involving both activation and inhibition.

Phyllotaxis is controlled by proteins that manipulate the concentration of the plant hormone auxin, which activates meristem growth, alongside other mechanisms to control the relative angle of buds around the stem.

From a biological perspective, arranging leaves as far apart as possible in any given space is favored by natural selection as it maximizes access to resources, especially sunlight for photosynthesis.

Chaos, flow, meanders

In mathematics, a dynamical system is chaotic if it is (highly) sensitive to initial conditions (the so-called “butterfly effect”), which requires the mathematical properties of topological mixing and dense periodic orbits.

Alongside fractals, chaos theory ranks as an essentially universal influence on patterns in nature. There is a relationship between chaos and fractals—the strange attractors in chaotic systems have a fractal dimension. Some cellular automata, simple sets of mathematical rules that generate patterns, have chaotic behavior, notably Stephen Wolfram’s Rule 30.

Vortex streets are zigzagging patterns of whirling vortices created by the unsteady separation of flow of a fluid, most often air or water, over obstructing objects. The smooth (laminar) flow starts to break up when the size of the obstruction or the velocity of the flow become large enough compared to the viscosity of the fluid.

Meanders are sinuous bends in rivers or other channels, which form as a fluid, most often water flows around bends. As soon as the path is slightly curved, the size and curvature of each loop increase as helical flow drags material like sand and gravel across the river to the inside of the bend. The outside of the loop is left clean and unprotected, so erosion accelerates, further increasing the meandering in a powerful positive feedback loop.

Waves, dunes

Waves are disturbances that carry energy as they move. Mechanical waves propagate through a medium – air or water, making it oscillate as they pass by.

Wind waves are sea surface waves that create the characteristic chaotic pattern of any large body of water, though their statistical behavior can be predicted with wind wave models.

As waves in water or wind pass over sand, they create patterns of ripples. When winds blow over large bodies of sand, they create dunes, sometimes in extensive dune fields as in the Taklamakan desert.

Dunes may form a range of patterns including crescents, very long straight lines, stars, domes, parabolas, and longitudinal or Seif (‘sword’) shapes.

Barchans or crescent dunes are produced by wind acting on desert sand; the two horns of the crescent and the slip face point downwind.

Sand blows over the upwind face, which stands at about 15 degrees from the horizontal, and falls onto the slip face, where it accumulates up to the angle of repose of the sand, which is about 35 degrees.

When the slip face exceeds the angle of repose, the sand avalanches, which is a nonlinear behavior: the addition of many small amounts of sand causes nothing much to happen, but then the addition of a further small amount suddenly causes a large amount to avalanche.

Apart from this nonlinearity, barchans behave rather like solitary waves.

Bubbles, foam

A soap bubble forms a sphere, a surface with the minimal area — the smallest possible surface area for the volume enclosed. Two bubbles together form a more complex shape: the outer surfaces of both bubbles are spherical; these surfaces are joined by a third spherical surface as the smaller bubble bulges slightly into the larger one.

A foam is a mass of bubbles; foams of different materials occur in nature. Foams composed of soap films obey Plateau’s laws, which require three soap films to meet at each edge at 120° and four soap edges to meet at each vertex at the tetrahedral angle of about 109.5°.

Plateau’s laws further require films to be smooth and continuous and to have a constant average curvature at every point. For example, a film may remain nearly flat on average by being curved up in one direction (say, left to right) while being curved downwards in another direction (say, front to back).

Structures with minimal surfaces can be used as tents. Lord Kelvin identified the problem of the most efficient way to pack cells of equal volume as a foam in 1887; his solution uses just one solid, the bitruncated cubic honeycomb with very slightly curved faces to meet Plateau’s laws.

No better solution was found until 1993 when Denis Weaire and Robert Phelan proposed the Weaire–Phelan structure; the Beijing National Aquatics Center adapted the structure for their outer wall in the 2008 Summer Olympics.

At the scale of living cells, foam patterns are common; radiolarians, sponge spicules, silicoflagellate exoskeletons, and the calcite skeleton of a sea urchin, Cidaris rugosa, all resemble mineral casts of Plateau foam boundaries. The skeleton of the Radiolarian, Aulonia hexagona, a beautiful marine form drawn by Haeckel, looks as if it is a sphere composed wholly of hexagons, but this is mathematically impossible.





The Euler characteristic states that for any convex polyhedron, the number of faces plus the number of vertices (corners) equals the number of edges plus two. A result of this formula is that any closed polyhedron of hexagons has to include exactly 12 pentagons, like a soccer ball, Buckminster Fuller geodesic dome, or fullerene molecule.

This can be visualized by noting that a mesh of hexagons is flat like a sheet of chicken wire, but each pentagon that is added forces the mesh to bend (there are fewer corners, so the mesh is pulled in).

Tessellations

Tessellations are patterns formed by repeating tiles all over a flat surface. There are 17 wallpaper groups of tilings. While common in art and design, exactly repeating tilings are less easy to find in living things.

The cells in the paper nests of social wasps, and the wax cells in honeycombs built by honey bees are well-known examples.

Among animals, bony fish, reptiles or the pangolin, or fruits like the Salak are protected by overlapping scales or osteoderms, these form more-or-less exactly repeating units, though often the scales in fact vary continuously in size.

Among flowers, the Snake’s Head Fritillary, Fritillaria meleagris, have a tessellated chequerboard pattern on their petals.

The structures of minerals provide good examples of regularly repeating three-dimensional arrays.

Despite the hundreds of thousands of known minerals, there are rather few possible types of arrangement of atoms in a crystal, defined by the crystal structure, crystal system, and point group; for example, there are exactly 14 Bravais lattices for the 7 lattice systems in three-dimensional space.

Cracks

Cracks are linear openings that form in materials to relieve stress.

When an elastic material stretches or shrinks uniformly, it eventually reaches its breaking strength and then fails suddenly in all directions, creating cracks with 120-degree joints, so three cracks meet at a node.

Conversely, when an inelastic material fails, straight cracks form to relieve the stress. Further stress in the same direction would then simply open the existing cracks; stress at right angles can create new cracks, at 90 degrees to the old ones.

Thus the pattern of cracks indicates whether the material is elastic or not. In a tough fibrous material like oak tree bark, cracks form to relieve stress as usual, but they do not grow long as their growth is interrupted by bundles of strong elastic fibers.

Since each species of tree has its own structure at the levels of cells and molecules, each has its own pattern of splitting in its bark.

Spots, stripes

Leopards and ladybirds are spotted; angelfish and zebras are striped.

These patterns have an evolutionary explanation: they have functions that increase the chances that the offspring of the patterned animal will survive to reproduce.

One function of animal patterns is camouflage; for instance, a leopard that is harder to see catches more prey.

Another function is signaling — for instance, a ladybird is less likely to be attacked by predatory birds that hunt by sight, if it has bold warning colors, and is also distastefully bitter or poisonous, or mimics other distasteful insects.

A young bird may see a warning patterned insect like a ladybird and try to eat it, but it will only do this once; very soon it will spit out the bitter insect; the other ladybirds in the area will remain unmolested.

The young leopards and ladybirds, inheriting genes that somehow create spottedness, survive. But while these evolutionary and functional arguments explain why these animals need their patterns, they do not explain how the patterns are formed.

Pattern formation

Alan Turing, and later the mathematical biologist James Murray, described a mechanism that spontaneously creates spotted or striped patterns: a reaction-diffusion system.

The cells of a young organism have genes that can be switched on by a chemical signal, a morphogen, resulting in the growth of a certain type of structure, say a darkly pigmented patch of skin.

If the morphogen is present everywhere, the result is an even pigmentation, as in a black leopard. But if it is unevenly distributed, spots or stripes can result.

Turing suggested that there could be feedback control of the production of the morphogen itself. This could cause continuous fluctuations in the amount of morphogen as it diffused around the body.

A second mechanism is needed to create standing wave patterns (to result in spots or stripes): an inhibitor chemical that switches off the production of the morphogen, and that itself diffuses through the body more quickly than the morphogen, resulting in an activator-inhibitor scheme.

The Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction is a non-biological example of this kind of scheme, a chemical oscillator.

Later research has managed to create convincing models of patterns as diverse as zebra stripes, giraffe blotches, jaguar spots (medium-dark patches surrounded by dark broken rings), and ladybird shell patterns (different geometrical layouts of spots and stripes, see illustrations).

Richard Prum’s activation-inhibition models, developed from Turing’s work, use six variables to account for the observed range of nine basic within-feather pigmentation patterns, from the simplest, a central pigment patch, via concentric patches, bars, chevrons, eyespot, pair of central spots, rows of paired spots and an array of dots.

More elaborate models simulate complex feather patterns in the Guinea fowl, Numida meleagris, in which the individual feathers feature transitions from bars at the base to an array of dots at the far (distal) end. These require an oscillation created by two inhibiting signals, with interactions in both space and time.

Patterns can form for other reasons in the vegetated landscape of tiger bush and fir waves. Tiger bush stripes occur on arid slopes where plant growth is limited by rainfall. Each roughly horizontal stripe of vegetation effectively collects the rainwater from the bare zone immediately above it.

Fir waves occur in forests on mountain slopes after wind disturbance, during regeneration. When trees fall, the trees that they had sheltered become exposed and are in turn more likely to be damaged, so gaps tend to expand downwind.

Meanwhile, on the windward side, young trees grow, protected by the wind shadow of the remaining tall trees.

Natural patterns are sometimes formed by animals, as in the Mima mounds of the Northwestern United States and some other areas, which appear to be created over many years by the burrowing activities of pocket gophers.

In permafrost soils with an active upper layer subject to annual freeze and thaw, the patterned ground can form, creating circles, nets, ice-wedge polygons, steps, and stripes.

The thermal contraction causes shrinkage cracks to form; in a thaw, water fills the cracks, expanding to form ice when next frozen, and widening the cracks into wedges. These cracks may join up to form polygons and other shapes.