Chaos theory takes a leap
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Your support makes all the difference.GOD MIGHT not play dice, but he seems to enjoy messing around with mathematicians. Centuries after they thought they had wrapped up the science of prediction with the bell-shaped curve - which forecasts the likelihood of random events - they have discovered that the universe has another law up its cosmic sleeve.
This law applies to a huge class of events, including the weather and natural disasters such as earthquakes, floods and forest fires. Although statisticians use the bell-shaped curve to forecast the likelihood and severity of such events, the new curve is likely to supplant it.
That could have a significant effect on insurance premiums and disaster prevention, because the curve suggests that "rare" events - such as, say, a very powerful hurricane - will occur more frequently than the bell-shaped curve predicts.
The new curve, which does not have a name, was discovered independently by researchers into magnetism, ecosystems and fluid turbulence. That implies that it is universal among particular systems defined mathematically as both "chaotic" and "self-similar" - that is, their behaviour has the same form whether viewed close-up or from a distance.
Dr Steve Bramwell, a chemist at University College London who discovered the curve while studying metals' magnetic properties, said yesterday: "This is a breakthrough in bringing these systems into the mainstream of physics."
Now, scientists are seeking the curve's mathematical formula. The bell curve predicts in a random sample of independent events how often one will happen. The new curve, however, applies to a random sample in which the events are not independent, because chaotic systems have an interplay between their elements: famously, the weather is unpredictable to the extent that the flap of a butterfly's wing can mean the difference between sunshine or a hurricane in the future.
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