Kenny Li 寫:
xaaron 寫:
Kenny Li 寫:
記住我今日講過呢句說話: 除非你見過實物, 否則唔好信!
日後我再補充!
有玄機
混沌理論的「蝴蝶效應」,來自美國一位氣象學家一篇六十年代的論文,名叫《一隻蝴蝶拍一下翅膀會不會在德克薩斯州引起龍捲風?》。
文章說,亞馬遜流域的一隻蝴蝶鼓動翅膀,會掀起密西西比河流域的一場風暴,這種現象叫「蝴蝶效應」,意思即一件表面上看來毫無關係、非常微小的事情,可能帶來巨大的改變。
晤....有睇頭
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterfly_effect
"Butterfly effect" is a phrase that encapsulates the more technical notion of sensitive dependence on initial conditions in chaos theory. The idea is that small variations in the initial conditions of a dynamical system can produce large variations in the long term behavior of the system.
Edward Lorenz first analyzed the effect in a 1963 paper for the New York Academy of Sciences. According to the paper, "One meteorologist remarked that if the theory were correct, one flap of a seagull's wings would be enough to alter the course of the weather forever." Later speeches and papers by Lorenz used the more poetic butterfly, possibly inspired by the 1952 Ray Bradbury short story A Sound of Thunder. In that story, a time traveller accidentally steps on a butterfly in the distant past, causing broad changes in the present. A common description of the effect says that a butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil can cause a tornado in Texas months later. A version from Car Talk is that "A butterfly flaps its wings in Africa, and the sink backs up in your garage."
The practical consequence of the butterfly effect is that complex systems such as the weather or the stock market are difficult to predict over any useful time range. Finite models that attempt to simulate these systems necessarily discard information about the system and the timing of events. These errors are magnified as each unit of time is simulated until the error bound on the result exceeds one hundred per cent.