Butterfly curve (transcendental)

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The butterfly curve.

The butterfly curve is a transcendental plane curve discovered by Temple H. Fay of University of Southern Mississippi in 1989.[1]

Equation

An animated construction gives an idea of the complexity of the curve (Click for enlarged version).

The curve is given by the following parametric equations:[2]

or by the following

polar equation
:

The sin term has been added for purely aesthetic reasons, to make the butterfly appear fuller and more pleasing to the eye.[1]

Developments

In 2006, two mathematicians using

Mathematica analyzed the function, and found variants where leaves, flowers or other insects became apparent.[3]

See also

https://books.google.com/books?id=AsYaCgAAQBAJ&dq=OSCAR+RAMIREZ+POLAR+EQUATION&pg=PA732

r = (cos 5θ)2 + sin 3θ + 0.3 for 0 ≤ θ ≤ 6π (A polar equation discovered by Oscar Ramirez, a UCLA student, in the fall of 1991.)

References

External links