Nature’s Patterns and the Fractional Calculus

Posted By: readerXXI

Nature’s Patterns and the Fractional Calculus
by Bruce J. West
English | 2017 | ISBN: 3110534118 | 199 Pages | ePUB | 14 MB

The book proposes complexity as source of allometry, which provides a new kind of force generated by the system's information gradient. Based on first principles, the scaling behavior of the probability density function is described by the exact solutions to a set of fractional differential equations.

Complexity increases with increasing system size in everything from organisms to organizations. The nonlinear dependence of a system's functionality on its size, by means of an allometry relation, is argued to be a consequence of their joint dependency on complexity (information). In turn, complexity is proven to be the source of allometry and to provide a new kind of force entailed by a system‘s information gradient. Based on first principles, the scaling behavior of the probability density function is determined by the exact solution to a set of fractional differential equations. The resulting lowest order moments in system size and functionality gives rise to the empirical allometry relations. Taking examples from various topics in nature, the book is of interest to researchers in applied mathematics, as well as, investigators in the natural, social, physical and life sciences.