(Epilepsy Warning) Mandelbrot set Zoom to E2000 in 60 seconds (Original Music & Video)
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- Опубліковано 24 лис 2024
- Please see my Vimeo version of this video to see a less compressed version: vimeo.com/2501...
Watch full screen to get the full effect.
I have a much slower, relaxing version (17min) of this video I have uploaded. This video and the other version both have variable zoom speeds to make a zoom this deep reasonable in terms of length.
As far as I can tell, this zoom sets a record for the combination of zoom speed combined with this kind of depth. The decimation tool in VirtualDub was used to create this extreme speed, and to vary it based on the clip in question.
The song in the video is an original creation of mine, and I did the vocals for the song myself, and then edited the sound with a reverb and equalizer effect in Cubase. The other sound comes from steel bowls that I played (the bowls were designed for kitchen use). This part of the track was also given a reverb and equalizer effect. The song is called 'Ancient Sound'. You can check it out here (downloadable): / ancient-sound
The diameter of the observable universe is about E26 miles (1 with 26 zeros following it). This video zooms in by an average of E34 every single second. E34 (1 with 34 zeros following it) is 100 million times larger than E26.
This means that for every second of this video (averaging), the Mandelbrot set is increasing in size to the extent of a sheet of paper (about 1 foot in diameter) expanding to become something 100 thousand times larger than the entire observable universe.
The segments of the video come in three speeds: 32, 64 and 256 times the original video speed. The 32X parts zoom in by 12E per second. The 64X parts zoom in by 24E per second. The 256X parts are zooming in at an unimaginable rate of 96E per second (remember that E26 miles is the size of the observable universe).
The original video (which is half the speed of the slower version of this video I uploaded) looks like its zooming in at a speed of about 25mph. If you accept that figure, this means my video is zooming in at around 6,400mph at its fastest - which is about the speed record for a rocket sled.
Trying to ride such a rocket sled in real life would be lethal, and I think you would see a huge amount of motion blur if you did (if your eyes worked at all).
Excluding the warning intro and the final frame fade out, this video is about 60 seconds long. E2000 is reached in 58 seconds of zooming.
I made a couple versions that zoom faster than this video, but they start to look and feel like really fast slideshows rather than real videos.
Made with Kalle's Fraktaler 2
en.wikipedia.o...
Josh