Earth Scientists Use Fractals to Measure and Predict Natural
Disasters
College Park, MD (January 30, 2002) Predicting the size,
location, and timing of natural hazards is virtually impossible,
but now, earth scientists are able to forecast hurricanes,
floods, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, wildfires, and landslides
using fractals.
A fractal is a mathematical formula of a pattern that repeats
over a wide range of size and time scales. These patterns
are hidden within more complex systems.
A good example of a fractal is the branching system of a river.
Small tributaries join to form larger and larger "branches"
in the system, but each small piece of the system closely
resembles the branching pattern as a whole.
At the American Geophysical Union meeting held last month,
Benoit Mandelbrot, a professor of mathematical sciences at
Yale University who is considered to be the father of fractals,
described how he has been using fractals to find order within
complex systems in nature, such as the natural shape of a
coastline. As a result of his research, earth scientists are
taking Mandelbrot's fractal approach one step further and
are measuring past events and making probability forecasts
about the size, location, and timing of future natural disasters.
"By understanding the fractal order and scale imbedded
in patterns of chaos, researchers found a deeper level of
understanding that can be used to predict natural hazards,"
says Christopher Barton, a research geologist at the United
States Geological Survey, "They can measure past events
like a hurricane and then apply fractal mathematics to predict
future hurricane events."
In the past, earth scientists have relied on statistical
methods to forecast natural hazard events, but when Barton
used fractals, he found that these patterns contain a level
of information that has never been seen using statistical
methods. Barton discovered that by comparing the fractal formulas
of the size and frequency of a hurricane's wind speed to the
historic record of information about past hurricane landfall
location and timing that he was able to predict the approximate
wind speed of the hurricane when it made landfall at a given
coastal location along the United States Atlantic and Gulf
of Mexico coasts.
Forecasts of hazardous natural phenomena based on the application
of fractals are now available to government agencies responsible
for planning and responding to natural disasters such the
Federal Emergency Management Association and other emergency
personnel to be able to better forecast the size, location,
and timing of future events. "Based on the fractal patterns
seen over the past 100 years," says Barton, "We
can better forecast the probability of a future event."
Thanks to Dr. Mandelbrot, earth scientists like Dr. Barton
have a powerful, new tool to predict future chaotic events
of nature.
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For more information contact:
Emilie Lorditch, (301)
209-3029
Expert:
Christopher Barton
Research Geologist
United States Geological Survey
St. Petersburg, FL
727-803-8747 x3014
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