How simple mathematical rules create nature's most beautiful patterns
In 1952, Alan Turing published "The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis" — a paper that revealed how simple chemical reactions between just two substances could spontaneously create the spots on a leopard, the stripes on a zebra, and the patterns on a seashell.
From the spiral arrangement of sunflower seeds to the branching of coral reefs, from the hexagonal symmetry of snowflakes to the flowing murmurations of starlings — each simulation here demonstrates how breathtaking complexity emerges from astonishingly simple rules. Adjust the parameters and watch nature rebuild itself before your eyes.
Gray-Scott reaction-diffusion producing leopard-like spots. Watch two chemicals create animal markings from nothing but noise.
Reaction-Diffusion 02The same equations that make spots create stripes with a single parameter change. Tune the chemistry to morph between pattern types.
Reaction-Diffusion 03One-dimensional reaction-diffusion painted row by row to create cone shell patterns. The shell grows from top to bottom like the real thing.
Reaction-Diffusion 04The classic activator-inhibitor system. Watch peaks of activation compete and self-organize into regular spacing patterns.
Activator-InhibitorWhy do sunflowers have Fibonacci spirals? Place seeds at the golden angle and watch perfect spirals emerge. Tweak the angle to see why 137.5° is magic.
Fibonacci 06L-system tree growth with realistic branching. A simple grammar produces trees indistinguishable from nature. Multiple species presets.
L-Systems 07Space colonization algorithm grows vein networks that look exactly like real leaves. Watch the intricate branching emerge in real-time.
Space Colonization 08The stunning self-similar spirals of Romanesco broccoli, where each bud is a miniature copy of the whole. Nature's most perfect fractal vegetable.
Self-SimilaritySymmetrical pattern generation on butterfly wing outlines. Reaction-diffusion within wing boundaries creates realistic eyespots and bands.
Pattern Formation 10Giraffe patches are Voronoi tessellations! Random seed points divide space into cells that look exactly like giraffe markings.
Voronoi 11Diffusion-limited aggregation produces coral-like branching structures. Random-walking particles build fractal forms one atom at a time.
DLA 12Generate unique fingerprint patterns using orientation fields and filtering. See how whorls, loops, and arches form from mathematical rules.
Pattern FormationHexagonal crystal growth where ice preferentially grows on tips, creating unique six-fold symmetric dendrites. No two are alike.
Crystal Growth 14Mysterious periodic precipitation bands that form in gels. Two reagents diffuse and react, leaving behind perfectly spaced rings.
Precipitation 15Desiccation crack formation like dried mud. Watch stress propagate and cracks branch at precise angles, creating satisfying tessellations.
Fracture Mechanics 16Dendritic crystal growth like frost on windows. Anisotropic growth creates beautiful branching structures with crystallographic symmetry.
Dendritic GrowthPhysarum polycephalum solves shortest-path problems! Mindless agents collectively build efficient networks connecting food sources.
Collective Intelligence 18Tissue growth through cell division and mechanical forces. Start from one cell and watch realistic tissue emerge with Voronoi-like packing.
Tissue Growth 19Mollusk shell growth follows logarithmic spirals. Three simple parameters produce the astonishing variety from nautilus to snail to ammonite.
Logarithmic Spirals 20Thousands of starlings creating breathtaking aerial formations. Three simple rules create fluid organic shapes that look choreographed but aren't.
Emergence