The Menger sponge is a fractal solid. It is also known as the Menger-Sierpinski sponge or, incorrectly, the Sierpinski sponge.
It is a three-dimensional extension of the Cantor set and Sierpinski carpet, with Hausdorff dimension (ln 20) / (ln 3) (approx. 2,726833). It was first described by Austrian mathematician Karl Menger in 1927.
Construction
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Construction of a Menger sponge can be visualized as follows:
- Begin with a cube, (first image).
- Shrink the cube to 1 / 3 of its original size and make 20 copies of it.
- Place the copies so they will form a new cube of the same size as the original one but lacking the centerparts, (next image).
- Repeat the process from step 2 for each of the remaining smaller cubes.
After an infinite number of iterations, a Menger sponge will remain.
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The number of cubes increases by : 20n. Where n is the number of iterations performed on the first cube:
| Iters
| Cubes
| Sum
|
| 0
| 1
| 1
|
| 1
| 20
| 21
|
| 2
| 400
| 421
|
| 3
| 8,000
| 8,421
|
| 4
| 160,000
| 168,421
|
| 5
| 3,200,000
| 3,368,421
|
| 6
| 64,000,000
| 67,368,421
|
At the first level, no iterations are performed, (20 n=0 = 1).
Properties
An illustration of
M3, the third iteration of the construction process.
Image © Paul Bourke, used by permission
Each face of the Menger sponge is a Sierpinski carpet; furthermore, any intersection of the Menger sponge with a diagonal or medium of the initial cube M0 is a Cantor set. The Menger sponge is a closed set; since it is also bounded, the Heine-Borel theorem yields that it is compact. Furthermore, the Menger sponge is uncountable and has Lebesgue measure 0.
As Peitgen, Jürgens and Saupe showed in 1992, the Menger sponge is also a super-object for all compact one-dimensional objects; that is, a topological equivalent of any compact one-dimensional object can be found in the Menger sponge.
Formal definition
Formally, a Menger sponge can be defined as follows:
where M0 is the unit cube and
See also
External links