In this manuscript, we explore stunning fractals as Julia and Mandelbrot sets of complexvalued cosine functions by establishing the escape radii via a four-step iteration scheme extended with s-convexity. We… Click to show full abstract
In this manuscript, we explore stunning fractals as Julia and Mandelbrot sets of complexvalued cosine functions by establishing the escape radii via a four-step iteration scheme extended with s-convexity. We furnish some illustrations to determine the alteration in generated graphical images and study the consequences of underlying parameters on the variation of dynamics, colour, time of generation, and shape of generated fractals. The black points in the obtained fractals are the “non-chaotic” points and the dynamical behaviour in the black area is easily predictable. The coloured points are the points that “escape”, that is, they tend to infinity under one of iterative methods based on a four-step fixed-point iteration scheme extended with s-convexity. The different colours tell us how quickly a point escapes. The order of escaping of coloured points is red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet, that is, the red point is the fastest to escape while the violet point is the slowest to escape. Mostly, these generated fractals have symmetry. The Julia set, where we find all of the chaotic behaviour for the dynamical system, marks the boundary between these two categories of behaviour points. The Mandelbrot set, which was originally observed in 1980 by Benoit Mandelbrot and is particularly important in dynamics, is the collection of all feasible Julia sets. It perfectly sums up the Julia sets.
               
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