Mandelbrot Sound [seizure warning]

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024

Комментарии • 347

  • @mr_koko2070
    @mr_koko2070 3 года назад +923

    Sounds like racing cars from like 80s/90s games

    • @joekerr9150
      @joekerr9150 3 года назад +21

      and from any roblox racing game from at like it's inception to 2015

    • @laserquant
      @laserquant 3 года назад +3

      I was wondering why this sounds so familiar. Thank you for giving the hint 😆

    • @rajaemanrm
      @rajaemanrm 3 года назад +6

      Big Rigs Over The Road Racing be like:

    • @necrobynerton7384
      @necrobynerton7384 3 года назад

      now that you said it it reminds me of need for speed porsche (that old ass game idk does it even exist or is known anymore lol)

    • @zarrowthehorse
      @zarrowthehorse 3 года назад +1

      Nostalgic

  • @Messerschmidt_Me-262
    @Messerschmidt_Me-262 3 года назад +988

    0:34 Sounds like the THX sound about to play

    • @arnavtete7793
      @arnavtete7793 3 года назад +18

      Lmfao you're sooo true!!!!

    • @rebane2001
      @rebane2001 3 года назад +37

      Starting a new game in 3D Pinball

    • @Charles37400
      @Charles37400 3 года назад +19

      I didnt know i watched this. I re discovered my own comment while stoned lol
      Edit: no wait its just a comment i liked with the same profile pic. Also bro thats awesome you said just what i would have said lol

    • @maurolionelmipianoyyo11
      @maurolionelmipianoyyo11 3 года назад +1

      I don’t hear

    • @Menaceblue3
      @Menaceblue3 3 года назад +1

      Too bad kids these days won't know the full body experience of listening to the THX sound system effect on stereo!

  • @Snowflake_tv
    @Snowflake_tv 4 года назад +543

    Feels like I took a time-machine to go somewhere.

    • @cones914
      @cones914 3 года назад +6

      You went to the high teen carnival from the 20th century.

    • @thomasbeaumont3668
      @thomasbeaumont3668 3 года назад +8

      You did, it sent you a minute 40 seconds into the future

  • @gonzalochristobal
    @gonzalochristobal 4 года назад +728

    pretty cool to see the representation of mandelbrot as a frequency, it makes me wonder what can come out from that with a fourier transform

    • @Nosirrbro
      @Nosirrbro 3 года назад +43

      Given it has infinite complexity I wonder if you could represent it with an infinite series of sine waves

    • @yoavmal
      @yoavmal 3 года назад +88

      You could, infact it's called the Weierstrass function - it's defined everywhere but differentiable nowhere. Its sequence is cos waves at lengths of 1/2^n, and rotation 2^n.

    • @Vulume
      @Vulume 3 года назад +9

      @@Nosirrbro That's what the Fourier transform is, and is possible for every function. But the angle trace of the contour of the Mandelbrot set does not have infinite complexity (what does that mean?), it simply is infinitely long. It's continuous with barely any momevent, it would be a boring Fourier transform with no analytical form.

    • @andrewfrankovic6821
      @andrewfrankovic6821 3 года назад

      As of yesterday I can almost relate to that statement.

    • @manuelsastre5230
      @manuelsastre5230 3 года назад

      That's literally how some synthesizers work

  • @JoseSanchez-im3xw
    @JoseSanchez-im3xw 4 года назад +261

    It feels like the waves are the Weierstrass function!

    • @dmytrk
      @dmytrk 4 года назад +53

      yeah, as the Mandelbrot set outline have infinite length, resulting function differetiates nowhere

    • @wallywutsizface6346
      @wallywutsizface6346 3 года назад +9

      Insane

    • @DiamondSane
      @DiamondSane 3 года назад

      haha, really similar

    • @APozzi
      @APozzi 3 года назад +2

      Bizarre related, Perhaps a gread ideia is subtract one from the other and see what is the small difference between them.

    • @abandoned_old_channel
      @abandoned_old_channel 3 года назад

      indeed

  • @thetimelords911
    @thetimelords911 3 года назад +87

    Its cool how you can almost make out the shape of the Mandelbrot Set in the graph. (The highest point on the graph is the 'needle' of the set, the rounded part around that is the first circular bulb, the 2 smaller peaks are the 'side bulbs' and the lowest point in the graph is the 'ass crack' of the main bulb!)

    • @AdenSallaberry
      @AdenSallaberry 3 года назад +1

      You made my day with that one, I can totally see it lol

    • @kundatrix
      @kundatrix 3 года назад +4

      That's the point

    • @JohnPaulBuce
      @JohnPaulBuce 2 года назад +2

      mandelthicc

  • @vibaj16
    @vibaj16 3 года назад +116

    Anyone else experiencing this: whenever I pause or I pause the video near the start, it makes a blip sound, kind of like the sound when you plug in headphones. It only happens near the start or end, so I think it has to do with the low sound during those parts.

    • @craigehales
      @craigehales  3 года назад +58

      Yes. The quiet part at the beginning and end is not really quiet, just very low frequency. Headphones/speakers probably snap to the position shown in the oscilloscope when restarted, or back to zero when stopped. Most of what you hear at the beginning and end is the higher frequency, but even lower amplitude, rumbling shape of the perimeter in a small region.

    • @nikopack7571
      @nikopack7571 3 года назад +25

      amateur audio mixer/masterer here:
      yes, there do exist very low frequencies at the beginning and end, and the noises you describe come from the speaker (nearly) instantaneously jumping to the point in the waveform the frequency is at. and likewise, the sudden stop produces a similar sharp crack. it's usually fixed by lopping off the lower frequencies, since anything below 20hz is not able to be heard by essentially all humans. however, sounds usually produce overtones, and in this case, the complex waveform produced by the variations of the mandelbrot set make it essentially impossible for all the frequencies to be isolated. hence, the popping/cracking sound.
      as for the sound being similar to connecting/disconnecting your headphones from a power source, i believe that has something to do with the headphones being directly triggered to very briefly go to max distance, then return to neutral from the connection points sliding past one another (it's really an explanation not meant to be given in text).
      hope this helps your concerns!

    • @roygalaasen
      @roygalaasen 3 года назад +2

      When you pause/unpause the video, you are not hitting the exact zero boundary of the oscillation, thus it makes a clicking sound in the discontinuity that happens when you start/stop playing the video.

    • @juniorsilvabroadcast
      @juniorsilvabroadcast 3 года назад

      Remember this doesn't happen in every sound set. Some computer sound cards have built-in high pass filtering that prevents your speaker from reproducing these extremely low frequencies

    • @roygalaasen
      @roygalaasen 3 года назад

      @@juniorsilvabroadcast of course. If the sound is filtered out, it is not there.

  • @GabrielsEpicLifeofGoals
    @GabrielsEpicLifeofGoals 4 года назад +218

    The waves look like a mandelbrot set! :)

    • @benapple9587
      @benapple9587 4 года назад +49

      more like the weierstrass function

    • @Cypekeh
      @Cypekeh 3 года назад +1

      @@benapple9587 interesting

    • @shovel4689
      @shovel4689 3 года назад

      @Exa Games lol exa games was my friend

    • @VoxelMusic
      @VoxelMusic 3 года назад +22

      Ill give you 3 guesses why

    • @petterlarsson7257
      @petterlarsson7257 3 года назад +9

      Because it is

  • @mastinho6761
    @mastinho6761 3 года назад +29

    *GTA San Andreas theme begins*

  • @numero7mojeangering
    @numero7mojeangering 4 года назад +54

    Nice way of generating procedural sound engine

  • @JOELwindows7
    @JOELwindows7 3 года назад +14

    Mandlebrot sound yess
    Hello everyone this is your daily dose of Recommendation

  • @VaraNiN
    @VaraNiN 3 года назад +24

    That graph looks a whole lot like a Weierstrass function which, I guess is what one would expect

  • @andrewfrankovic6821
    @andrewfrankovic6821 3 года назад +13

    At first I thought this might be a sound that only a dog could hear. Then I turned up the volume.

  • @chickennuggetman2593
    @chickennuggetman2593 3 года назад +3

    "What i don't hear anything- OH SHIT OH FUCC"

  • @cheezoncrack1
    @cheezoncrack1 3 года назад +3

    Congratulations on making one of the coolest videos I’ve ever seen.

  • @vehicleboi5598
    @vehicleboi5598 2 года назад +3

    the start sounded very soothing

  • @Towalak
    @Towalak 3 года назад +25

    Looks something like the Weierstrass function

    • @RefluxCitadelRevelations
      @RefluxCitadelRevelations 3 года назад +1

      Legit about to say the same thing, and in a way it's pretty damn similar since the more accurate both functions become, the closer it becomes to its "true" form.

  • @vit8219
    @vit8219 3 года назад +5

    This sound reminds me on a washing mashine

  • @grantlauzon5237
    @grantlauzon5237 3 года назад +3

    Sounds like an engine noise from a video game made in 1998.

  • @Umesh-Kumar
    @Umesh-Kumar 3 года назад +1

    this will be a funny meme in 5 years

  • @feeeyniac
    @feeeyniac 3 года назад +5

    People: what is video doing?
    Him: *hes beggining to believe*

  • @energymass7944
    @energymass7944 3 года назад +4

    sounds like a energy weapon charging. also, that's a more triangely triangle wave.

  • @MRL8770
    @MRL8770 3 года назад +10

    Nice. I think it would be very interesting to remove the DC offset and then scale the amplitude more the lower the frequency gets. This should result in low frequencies featuring a rich high-end, possibly similar to how the higher frequencies sound. It could also create an interesting Shepherd-time effect when increasing/decreasing pitch.

  • @multixdd
    @multixdd 5 лет назад +24

    ITS EXPLODING

  • @u.kw1461
    @u.kw1461 3 года назад +4

    That is interesting. Never knew it could be done with sound too

  • @citrus.ailuri
    @citrus.ailuri 3 года назад +11

    Nobody:
    0:34: My computer fan when I open ms paint

    • @panhandlesomen
      @panhandlesomen 3 года назад

      My computer explodes if i open it you fool!

  • @ultradragon999
    @ultradragon999 3 года назад +2

    Thought that was antarctica in the thumbnail for a sec

  • @nickel-alloys
    @nickel-alloys 3 года назад +2

    Teacher: describe Mandelbrot set
    Me:

  • @smiledogjgp
    @smiledogjgp 3 года назад +2

    You've been listening to: Imaginary radio, i102.3

  • @VisayasRealMe_2010
    @VisayasRealMe_2010 5 месяцев назад +1

    I thought it always has the Shepard tones or Risset rhythm. They are beyonf those tones.

  • @synchro505
    @synchro505 3 года назад +1

    I think the algorithm is trying to tell me something...

  • @NoName-fc9dp
    @NoName-fc9dp 3 года назад +11

    Was fully expecting a THX meme.

  • @H982_FKL
    @H982_FKL Год назад +1

    What kind of car engine is this?

  • @wimpwampwomp
    @wimpwampwomp 3 года назад +1

    Didn't know that my Mac's fan whenever I run Microsoft Teams was just making an audial representation of Mandelbrot

  • @thomasbeaumont3668
    @thomasbeaumont3668 3 года назад +2

    You have just traveled almost 2 minutes through time

  • @sonalijoshi131
    @sonalijoshi131 3 года назад +2

    Many graphs formed were actually the 'continuous everywhere differentiable nowhere' ones.

  • @Wall_T3mbok4556
    @Wall_T3mbok4556 3 года назад +8

    Wait since when did a freaking mandelbrot has a sound

    • @sebastiangudino9377
      @sebastiangudino9377 3 года назад +7

      Loping around it's countout, at any point, you have a distance with respect to the origin of the plane. Using that as a frecuency and moving along the curve (Also at a given frecuency) will give you a set or frecuencies that you can use as pitches over time
      What you are seeing in the video is basically that. But to make it even more instresting. The frecuency at which the point travels around the curve gradually increases and the gradually decreases.
      And just can use that same techniques tu turn tour favorite fractal curve into a sound, you're welcome

    • @yongewok
      @yongewok 3 года назад +3

      anything that moves from high to low points on a graph can be played as a waveform

  • @Kenchis
    @Kenchis 3 года назад +4

    0:36 sounds like intro of one - swedish house mafia lmao

  • @dwightlumain8645
    @dwightlumain8645 Год назад +1

    It's a racing car

  • @moon_sonata15
    @moon_sonata15 3 года назад +1

    The best ASMR I've ever heard

  • @3861j
    @3861j 3 года назад +26

    0:40

  • @svz5990
    @svz5990 10 месяцев назад

    even the sound itself is a fractal

  • @fernandoluis5117
    @fernandoluis5117 3 года назад +1

    Sounds like one of those samples the DJs uses to make EDM House and Trance musics.

  • @johnpooky84
    @johnpooky84 4 года назад +7

    The sound reminds me of an NES game called Super Sprint.

    • @areyouavinalaff
      @areyouavinalaff 4 года назад +1

      haha reminded me of outrun. 8 bit ferrari sounds

    • @blueelectric05
      @blueelectric05 3 года назад

      Reminds me of the old Pole Position arcade game

  • @randygumaer282
    @randygumaer282 4 года назад +11

    Wow, I really never considered a frequency application to fractal geometry. I have so many questions about this and the possible applications to gain knowledge from nature. I've seen experiments with plant's and sound how positive sound help plant's flourish and negative sound's cause the plant to struggle so, what if we were to measure/or map a plant's geometry if that's even possible and match it with compatible harmonic frequencies what would be the result?

    • @sourceawry4035
      @sourceawry4035 3 года назад

      I recently realized something that was right in my face my entire life, literally:
      my sinuses and what the word means. I laughed hysterically and uncontrollably for a good 2 full minutes when it hit me, bc I can be so slow and oblivious sometimes, for a person alleged to be intelligent. I'm good at tests, lol.
      Beginning April 21, 2016, I began to feel waves of energy that I could not explain. They would come and go, persisting for roughly 36 hours, during which time they would build, peak, and diminish. The feeling ranged from sea legs to a surface anxiety that made me want to shake it off my arms and shoulders. I also experienced sudden and severe sinus activity from mucus floods to sinus migraines, and the only thing to clear the symptoms was to find the correct setting on my frequency generator app. When I was able to find the tone, the bones in my face would resonate like my skull was a speaker membrane.
      I searched tons of public websites that offered all types of terrestrial datasets and imagery, and what I found was anomalous spikes in the Schuman resonance, and what I was told were digital artifacts in the precipitation maps at MIMIC-1. I doubt a computer glitch would make my face ring, but that's what they said...even after it kept happenning outside of the explanation given. Last time I checked, the notice was still up on the old site, note they have since moved to MIMIC-2.
      My conclusion is that the human sinuses are for sensing vibrational movements, hence their name. I can't believe how far into the research I was before I put it together. DOH! I do think you should explore more on the effects of frequency on living things, bc it is extremely interesting. Cheers!

    • @alexking1129
      @alexking1129 3 года назад +1

      @@sourceawry4035 Interesting thing you said about the Schumann resonance anomalies, had to look that up. But what do you suppose the precipitation maps have to do with it? Also, while your theory of the sinuses detecting frequency may very well be true, I don't think the sinuses were named for it, the word "sinus" came from the latin root that meant a curve or bend in a hollow cavity.

    • @sourceawry4035
      @sourceawry4035 3 года назад +1

      @@alexking1129, the precipitation maps were only related bc the waves I and others felt appeared in the map graphics as pulse waves originating from the Antarctic. The action of question was the decision to dismiss the video artifact evidence as a glitch in the time and date rollover of their software program, as the clock ends a day at 23:59 and rolls into the next at 00:00. At the time the glitch was given as the cause of the video disturbance, the mimic employee gave assurance the error had been corrected. There was no information offered as to the reason a glitch within one standard unit of movement for measuring time, a second, would have affected portions of the imagery at various random times of day within the data file logs for that calendar day. Within days of the alleged correction, repeat events were reported and never given any acknowledgement or explanation. I found it to be contrary to my experience, regarding the nature of career scientists and researchers, to ignore a mistake raised publicly while also allowing the evidence of the mistake to be visible on the site notification board. The fact that the data is available as a matter of public access to the information only causes it to be that much more odd. It would have been more appropriate to quash inquiries by giving notice that the issue was under pending study to identify the cause. In retrospect, I started to wonder if this was a clever way to softly disclose confirmation to the 5 or so people on earth quirky enough to care or dig into it, including myself. Okay, maybe 50, lol.
      If the pattern of behavior were isolated to a single incident and a single public website dedicated to earth sciences, it wouldn't have been significant, in my opinion. I would have remembered it as strange, but would never have suspected it was intented to mislead or deceive. I am not saying that now, but it did give me reason to remain open to the possibility. Rightly so, bc there have been and continue to be similarly patterned responses elsewhere.
      A second such anomalous observation was made when the live feed video from the skycam at the Antarctica base (I think is named Admunson- Scott) showed a series of bright green flashes almost like green balls of lightning in the clouds above. The following day the feed went offline for a period of days, and a statement was given which explained that, at the time of the alleged atmospheric phenomenon, an unscheduled experiment was in progress which involved observing lasers trained on clouds. They added that the video was not showing evidence of an atmospheric plasmic discharge event having occurred. I don't recall saying that it had. There was also a series of electrical surges in Alaska, which were recorded on security cameras at a remote site at night. I think it was an observation station weather and the way north sun cycles. The youtube channel that posted them was Joanne Steen, an Australian woman with a good sense of humor, and she would offer silly sci fi narratives, bc the video was so strange and no one seemed to care. She only does meme compilations lately, after her channel was deleted and she returned as Joanne Steen 2. It may Stern, but definitely Joanne.
      end part 1

    • @sourceawry4035
      @sourceawry4035 3 года назад +1

      part 2 of 2
      At one point in time, I could provide you with links to videos that aligned in time with instances of irregularity recorded by curious observers with youtube channels and blogs. One of Joanne's showed footage of a shockwave as it moved across a bay with many sailboats out on the water. The camera gave a wide view of the bay from a higher altitude, and the shockwave was visible only by the effects of it as it shook each boat in tandem. Many videos showing such things and entire channels that put them up have since been deleted by youtube for various vague reasons, one reason being youtube user reports requesting the content be removed. There are various organizations and collective volunteer groups that are known to provide the service of brigaiding a channel on behalf of a cause or by competing interests. This is a huge problem right now for the free flow of information and free expression, and the result of a hostile political climate. The dishonesty and slander tactics were so unthinkable to me at first, but having seen them become the norm over time, relative to their timing, gives merit in retrospect that I had indeed detected a total disregard for factual accuracy, which I now know to be a full on culture war over the narrative. Finally, however, the average person is seeking new sources for news and current events, and they are slowly joining the cause for protecting free speech and adding to conversations deemed unspeakable by corporate media. There is the general assumption that regulations are in place to impose a standard of journalistic integrity, and that media groups are not permitted to knowingly report false information, but that ended March 01, 2013 when the NDAA of 2013 was enacted into law. The bill was named the Smith-Mundt Modernization Act, and it repealed the prohibition of propaganda disseminated domestically, targeted to shape pubic opinion regarding war and leading up to war, which is always ongoing somewhere. I just didn't expect the war to be a civil war between the people and their representative goverment, invisible, psychological, and undeclared. I also did not expect to discover such conditioned civilian responses to alarming developments within positions of governmental authority, which are often based on the term "conspiracy theorist" being recklessly hurled as a slur against reasonable skeptics. It's the cooties of information, and people are in the habit of ridicule before due diligence, against their best interest. Cause and effect be divorced from logic, God forbidding a conspiracy might be suggested by the evidence. My only advice is to count the sleeping sheep and wake the lions among them, because the sheep are a helpless pain in the ass.
      There are additional supplemental reports of interest still out there circulating, one is a science article about particle emissions from the south pole that were contradictory and impossible according to standard physics. Another was the anomalous seismic event that made it through the cracks of info containment, which occurred on 11/11/18. The report gave readings to back up the claim that the earth had "rung like a bell", and was broken on twitter by a researcher at a remote facility located on an island in the middle of the pacific ocean, if I recall the location correctly. There have also been various sky phenomenon like noctilucent clouds well beneath their normal latitude of appearance, reports of apocalyptic violet skies in southern states during electrical storms, and a change in the behavior of lightning and thunder, from short bursts to slow rolls, here in Indiana where I live. I have seen videos from all over the world that show extremely unusual lightning strikes that I can only explain as a fire hose of molten lightning streaming against a building for durations of 10 to 30 seconds. My 49 years on earth and the handful of US cities I have lived in, plus the many roadtrips I have taken, including one from Anchorage, Alaska to the Cabos in Mexico, do not render me an honorary meteorologist or any such credential, but it doesn't take an expert to notice something strange, and I need no outside inspections to call it as I see it and not require some asshole's stamp of approval to verify I exist an am, and I can express my experiences and the nature thereof because I am, and that qualifies me as belonging here just like everyone else who was born naked and totally dependent on their mother. Apparently, it is the audacity of discussing these things that brings the ministry of truth, and it's anyone's guess why no one should be allowed to say words. Good luck with that one.
      Last, but not least, is the most recent and most damning of cover ups, which was spotted in real time by the youtuber Dutchsinse, an earthquake forecaster. His channels and videos have been deleted many times over, and the USGS even attempted to sue him for false claims once. However, he is very accurate and shows the method he uses to forecast seismic and volcanic activity by predicting the region, depth and magnitudes by analyzing the seismic data from daily and hourly events on the official logs. He was warning of activity in California and Oregon, and during him showing the live feed of that region, he saw the sudden ignition of 6 hotspots in perfect alignment and uniformly distanced, which came up as wildfires. On his monitor he also saw a heat beam that seemed to come from the Malheur Wildlife Preserve, which was made popular by the Bundy Standoff over grazing rights on public lands, and the beam spanned to each of the ignition locations. Weird, right? The beam effect did not come through to his viewers on his screen capture feed, so he did a follow up supplemental video to enhance visibilty of the video images with standard filter effects like contrast, exposure, and rgb saturations, but no actual alteration to the image itself. When he went back to show them again from the public website he was using, they were gone. Poof! like magic. However, he took a screen capture to repeat the method of adjusting the viewing settings, and when he raised the brightness it revealed 6 odd black blobs scribbled over the locations previously showing the fire activity. These types of inkblots are known to occur in photoshop and photo editing actions, specifically the function of blacking out unwanted photo artifacts with the ink and brush feature. The black out effect only serves to conceal on a black background, and is revealed as black blobs if the image brightness is raised, which is what happened. The map he was showing was a public firemap, which gives satellite and heat signature data for fire detection and public fire advisory. I do not know if his channel is back up, but he has always been the guy who stands his ground and fights the censorship. He often makes the point that if he was giving false earthquake info, and if the USGS insists no such forecasting exists, and if he shows his method and the info he uses to make the predictions, why is he so proveably accurate, and why is he not being presented with exact examples from his library of like 10 full years of content showing where his reporting was false? He really is a rather unique personality, and his content is self evident. Very respectable guy.
      I put this collection of examples together from memory alone, but my memory is pretty sharp...so I hear. It is a valuable tool I use and test regularly, and even though I do my best to give proximity of time and location, I make no claim of perfection and have no obligation to provide that which can easily be found with byo curiosity. I hope you find interest in what I have shared, bc it is bonkers to me that there is no news of these things in the scope of further discovery. Where are those more qualified that myself, a random wordy stranger on the internet, to ask proper questions and make general announcements to keep the public from freaking out when they think the sky is falling? My only suggestion is from what I have learned by experience, which is that answered questions are rarely asked, whether or not they are correct. So, if these matters are benign and unremarkable, why not use them for drumming up interest among the science minded youth who are desperately needed in our STEM fields for future discovery? Why hide it? If it is unknown, I would think it wouldn't hurt to let the public work on it, just like the amateur astronomers who are credited with discovering new sky objects. I can't tell you what any of it means to conclude, and even if I had a theory it would lend merit to the validity if I let truth work its magic and know it by the nature of itself. If you come to a similar theories, and we find ways to test them, then you get the same result as myself, isn't that the scientific method in action? The world is welcome to descend into madness until the end of time, but I'll pass, thank you. If that makes me a habitual offender of mind crimes, so be it. Cheers.

    • @sebastiangudino9377
      @sebastiangudino9377 3 года назад

      Can you point to this studies with plants and sounds? The idea of "pleasant" and "unpleasant" sound is EXTREMELY arbitrary. Sound is just air vibrating, and we tend to persive frecuencies that form "simple" intervals consonants (With some exceptions). But that's about it, and is a big simplification. Since intervals that sound nice to one person or culture might sound completely horrible to others. A few centuries ago the major third was concidered disonant. For example.
      I find hard to believe that the precise eurocentric bias as to what sounds good and bad will precisely in just the right way afect the development of a plant. As is somehow the frecuencies that 18th century white rich musicians liked are the "right ones". Sounds sketchy, oversimplistic, and a bit dangerous to believe. But I might very well be wrong! It all depends on what the definition of "pleasant sounds" is in said researchs. Which I would love to read

  • @drenz1523
    @drenz1523 3 года назад +1

    So basically CodeParade wasn't the first to have this idea

    • @ajejebrazor4936
      @ajejebrazor4936 3 года назад

      Arrived to this for the same reason!

    • @jan_Mamu
      @jan_Mamu 3 года назад +1

      he did a different thing:'
      here it's just the distance to the "center" that determines the pitch (more like the vibrations).
      where as codeparade made it using the algorithm to make the pitch.

  • @HugoStuff
    @HugoStuff 3 года назад +2

    8-bit car engine noise intensifies

  • @mlggodzilla1567
    @mlggodzilla1567 3 года назад +1

    Average diesel supercar when it reach full speed: *glorious v12 sounds*
    Tesla when reaches full speed: 0:49

  • @That_One_Guy...
    @That_One_Guy... 3 года назад +1

    0:51 was expecting pinball start game sound

  • @aelsi2
    @aelsi2 3 года назад +3

    Mandelbrot set go vrooooom

  • @virmay6687
    @virmay6687 3 года назад +1

    my washing machine

  • @hupert9421
    @hupert9421 3 года назад +1

    when the Mandelbrot set spins a bearing

  • @SupaKoopaTroopa64
    @SupaKoopaTroopa64 3 года назад +3

    What would it sound like if your sampled it at a higher resolution (More audio samples per radian of rotation)?

    • @craigehales
      @craigehales  3 года назад

      At the beginning it is sampling all the points. The step size gets bigger to increase the frequency. The rumbling sound is the shape of the set, with a large DC offset and a small AC amplitude. When the rotation is fast enough you start to hear tones from the repeating symmetry of the overall shape.

  • @Linguistic1
    @Linguistic1 3 года назад

    It is my theory that this is an audio representation of the passage of time in any given universe. Almost infinite iterations to spin out, but not infinite, merely unfathomable. Hence the fact that we can measure it.
    Thus, any given universe can be expressed as a different iteration of this process. And given that we are just now as a species discovering the significance of audiology, it has intense implications...

  • @spacemanspiff7283
    @spacemanspiff7283 3 года назад +4

    So that’s where the socks in the dryer go!

  • @MarieDomander
    @MarieDomander 3 года назад +5

    Lol that sound very similar to the so called dmt noise or/and the noise one hears just before having a sleep paralys. Interesting.

    • @plague_doctor0237
      @plague_doctor0237 3 года назад

      I've heard this sound before waking up from an attempt at a lucid dream. Kinda freaky

  • @Jmax4383
    @Jmax4383 3 года назад +1

    I was waiting for it to switch gears

  • @TECHnoman753
    @TECHnoman753 3 года назад +1

    There's definitely something to this

  • @exactpause9218
    @exactpause9218 3 года назад +4

    Okay, I'm not really into modular synths but imagine a fractal osscilator module, where you can choose a fractal and the Frequency, maybe even iterations!

    • @1owk3y
      @1owk3y 3 года назад

      "...saw and sine are such pleb synth wave bases, generally I use Sierpiński or Mandelbrot waves for that rich depth you can only get from peering into the centre of the universe..."

  • @MpWrproductions
    @MpWrproductions 3 года назад +1

    this made everything in my house go silent

  • @Anklejbiter
    @Anklejbiter 3 года назад +2

    I'd be interested in seeing this with other shapes as well, like the Koch snowflake or the coastline of Britain

  • @PaunchyRobot
    @PaunchyRobot 3 года назад +2

    This new death grips album slaps

    • @KPenceable
      @KPenceable 3 года назад

      it sounds like hustle bones

  • @sunburst3476
    @sunburst3476 3 года назад +1

    Sounds like my dad's boat trying to start up

  • @sevketyahya
    @sevketyahya 3 года назад +2

    It sounds like it could be a Half Life sound

  • @happypiano4810
    @happypiano4810 3 года назад +1

    Ach, my tinnitus hates this. But I love it.

  • @agrume_music
    @agrume_music 3 года назад +1

    I was expecting a swedish house mafia song

  • @monsieuralexandergulbu3678
    @monsieuralexandergulbu3678 3 года назад +1

    Sounds cool!

  • @wozniakowski1217
    @wozniakowski1217 3 года назад +1

    I wonder what would come out if it was sent through osciloscope. Could it potentially redraw the shape?

    • @craigehales
      @craigehales  3 года назад +3

      No, the angle information is lost when the x-y pairs on the track are converted to a length. The angle backs up, goes forward, a lot to follow the convoluted track. It could have been a stereo track of the x on left channel and y on right channel, then it would be exactly what you describe if those channels were sent back to an x-y scope.

    • @wozniakowski1217
      @wozniakowski1217 3 года назад +2

      @@craigehales thank you for that in depth explanation! Yeah, it was a bit bold of me to asume all of that while knowing nothing about the workings of osciloscope. Still a great vid though!

  • @Povilaz
    @Povilaz 3 года назад +1

    Nice.

  • @lookwhostalking2571
    @lookwhostalking2571 3 года назад

    Blasting off into hyperspace

  • @BubbleBFDI
    @BubbleBFDI 3 года назад +1

    The waves are fractals

  • @urEverydayBagelBoi
    @urEverydayBagelBoi 3 года назад +1

    The waveform in the corner looks a tiny bit like a piece of the Mandelbrot set

  • @cj_r3249
    @cj_r3249 3 года назад +1

    old video game car sounds be like

  • @fel-is
    @fel-is Год назад

    Oh, the sound is also a fractal...

  • @klaasbil8459
    @klaasbil8459 3 года назад +1

    The main thing you hear is the frequency of the rotation of the 'probing' vector. This is an arbitrary choice and has nothing to do with the Mandelbrot set. The only thing the Mandelbrot set does is colouring that sound a bit. I had expected more.

    • @yat_ii
      @yat_ii 3 года назад

      this

  • @donutlover772
    @donutlover772 3 года назад

    Sounds like a floridian priest about to restart the universe

  • @redtachyon2718
    @redtachyon2718 3 года назад +1

    I wish it was a bit more high-res(The audio). Even so, this is awesome!!

  • @thingthingthingthingthingthing
    @thingthingthingthingthingthing 3 месяца назад

    The sound waves (not wave anymore) are also fractals

  • @gtrguy17
    @gtrguy17 3 года назад +1

    Approaching light speed in 3, 2, 1

  • @chrisroode
    @chrisroode 3 года назад +3

    I totally made a song off of this sound in like 2010 for my masters program...

  • @justachipofftheiceberg6313
    @justachipofftheiceberg6313 3 года назад +1

    Hold your phones speaker up to your ear and dont take it away it sounds like a dmt trip

  • @paulfoss5385
    @paulfoss5385 3 года назад +4

    Could the process be reversed to take a signal and make an object, like a Weierstrassbulb?

    • @atomictraveller
      @atomictraveller 3 года назад

      sine, cosine, circle.

    • @fazaazafg
      @fazaazafg 3 года назад

      real=cos(time)*hertz
      im=sin(time)*hertz

  • @ayanmaity2605
    @ayanmaity2605 3 года назад

    I don't know shit about mathematics, yet I am here.

  • @aurisbunni
    @aurisbunni 3 года назад

    Death Grips will definitely have a field day with this.

  • @kevinfinkel5536
    @kevinfinkel5536 3 года назад +1

    I don't see how that could cause a seizure. That was no worse than listening to those mini dirt bikes or rice rockets.

  • @TheBossmop
    @TheBossmop 3 года назад +1

    I knew Mandelbrot before it was cool

  • @jonathanhill3604
    @jonathanhill3604 3 года назад +2

    Kinda sounds like my old wheat grinder at home

  • @vladosononame6376
    @vladosononame6376 3 года назад +1

    Its not mandelbrot sound its just modulated sine wave

  • @peppermint13me
    @peppermint13me 3 года назад

    Mandelbrot sounds like, before it was cool.

  • @keshikantube
    @keshikantube 5 лет назад +7

    Nice sound.

  • @Mejolov24
    @Mejolov24 3 года назад +2

    0:20 *prende el computador* 0:51 *apaga el computador

  • @NINJA-tf6bf
    @NINJA-tf6bf 3 года назад

    So he is basically driving a formula 🏎

  • @PeterGriffinAtYouTube
    @PeterGriffinAtYouTube 2 года назад

    When I unpause at the lower frequencies, there is a pop

  • @ΚωνσταντινοςΓ-ω6φ
    @ΚωνσταντινοςΓ-ω6φ 3 года назад +1

    139.27 so that s the top speed of mandelbrot

  • @xelalexa3262
    @xelalexa3262 Год назад

    when you pause and play it makes a sound yall

  • @sheeeeeeeeeeesh
    @sheeeeeeeeeeesh 3 года назад

    Modulation with the mandlebrot

  • @pigeondamigion569
    @pigeondamigion569 3 года назад

    MORTY WHERE WHERE GOING WE DONT NEED ROADS

  • @ApvCoffee
    @ApvCoffee 3 года назад

    Bruh whos playing excitebike be quiet im trying to listen to what a mandelbrot sounds like

  • @Mt-ze3xe
    @Mt-ze3xe 3 года назад

    When spongebob said ‘more power’ I guess he really meant ‘more power’

  • @L00PdeL00P
    @L00PdeL00P 3 года назад +2

    Well I just gotta know, Right?