Sujet : Re: 4D Visualisierung
De : chris.m.thomasson.1 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Chris M. Thomasson)
Groupes : sci.mathDate : 11. Sep 2024, 21:40:25
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vbsv7p$3pr1c$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 9/11/2024 1:22 PM, guido wugi wrote:
Op 11-9-2024 om 10:15 schreef Chris M. Thomasson:
On 9/11/2024 1:12 AM, Chris M. Thomasson wrote:
On 8/28/2024 12:30 PM, guido wugi wrote:
[...]
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Check this out:
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https://youtu.be/IVR5I5mnrsg
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;^)
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Also, iirc, this experiment of mine has a vector with a non-zero 4d component...
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https://youtu.be/KRkKZj9s3wk
I don't understand it, but they're beautiful graphics alright! But 4D?
Thanks. Iirc, it had a single vector in the field that had a w component that was .0001 non-zero.
Here are some other fields, can you get to them? The FB is infested with javascript... ;^o
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/Urg2ehsEBLq91NNt/https://www.facebook.com/share/p/cFeUgQdE723LpT5N/Now, the only way I can actually "see" the affects of any non-zero 4d components (w) in (x, y, z, w) is how they alter the field lines. So, I plot a field A with all zero w components. Then I plot field B with non-zero w components. It's pretty interesting. My experimental n-ary field is basically a source sink vector field.
Meanwhile I've put a Desmos4D graph of Clifford tori, Dupin cyclides (also shown together!) and Hopf fibration.
bolnorm4D.CT-DC-HF | Desmos <https://www.desmos.com/3d/rwj9vo31yc?lang=nl>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1y6qrsJff-g&list=PL5xDSSE1qfb6c7UHcURl6wXh0pH4ARB75&index=21