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- Turing showed how chemical reactions can create patterns. If you mix the ingredients he specified, they can separate into quasi-ordered patches of different composition.
www.chemistryworld.com/features/turing-patterns/4991.article
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Turing showed how chemical reactions can create patterns. If you mix the ingredients he specified, they can separate into quasi-ordered patches of different composition.
Definition. Turing patterns are complex spatial structures that emerge from the reaction-diffusion processes described by Alan Turing. They arise when two or more substances (or chemicals) interact and diffuse across a space, leading to the formation of stable, organized patterns in nature, such as stripes or spots on animal fur.
Nov 8, 2021 · Nearly seventy years ago Alan Turing, a pioneer of Computer Science, developed a theory to explain how certain patterns in nature could arise spontaneously from simple chemical systems. This idea was a significant departure from much of his previous work on the theory of computation, and used very different kinds of mathematics.
Scientists have long been intrigued by a mechanism first predicted by Alan Turing that leads to self-organizing chemical patterns. Now they have a guide to creating them experimentally.
- Annette F. Taylor, Mark R. Tinsley
- 2009
"The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis" is an article that the English mathematician Alan Turing wrote in 1952. [1] It describes how patterns in nature , such as stripes and spirals, can arise naturally from a homogeneous, uniform state.
Turing patterns refer to self-organizing spatial structures that arise through reaction-diffusion processes involving chemical reactions and diffusion of substances. These patterns are crucial in understanding how complex biological structures, like animal fur and skin, emerge from simple interactions between chemicals, illustrating the ...
The Turing pattern is a concept introduced by English mathematician Alan Turing in a 1952 paper titled "The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis" which describes how patterns in nature, such as stripes and spots, can arise naturally and autonomously from a homogeneous, uniform state.