Image Pack
20 high-resolution images of chaotic attractors — Lorenz, Clifford, and Aizawa systems in curated color palettes. Perfect for wallpapers, prints, and backgrounds.
Price
$8.00
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About the craft
Every piece in this bundle is rendered from real mathematical equations — no AI, no procedural noise filters, no stock libraries. Generated frame by frame from the underlying systems by a small studio of mathematicians and engineers.
Included
The mathematics
A strange attractor is a region of phase space toward which a dynamical system evolves over time — but unlike a fixed point or a periodic orbit, the trajectory never repeats. It folds and stretches forever inside a bounded volume. The Lorenz attractor, discovered by Edward Lorenz in 1963 while modeling atmospheric convection, is the canonical example: three coupled differential equations whose solutions trace a butterfly-shaped manifold that has become a symbol of deterministic chaos. The Clifford and Aizawa systems extend this idea with different nonlinear couplings, producing scrolls, shells, and toroidal sheets. What you see in these images is not a sketch or a stylization — each line is the literal trajectory of a point obeying the equations, rendered at full numerical precision over millions of integration steps.
dx/dt = σ(y−x), dy/dt = x(ρ−z)−y, dz/dt = xy−βz
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