Nature by Numbers - Fibonacci and the Golden Ratio

Among
the pre-Socratics, it was Pythagoras who hypothesized that the most
basic constituent of the universe wasn't some material substance but
rather numbers. The idea must have seemed strange to most of his
contemporaries, but over two thousands years of research have led to the
inescapable conclusion that the book of the universe really seems to be
written in the language of mathematics.

One
of the most famous and intriguing mathematical patterns found
throughout nature is phi (also known as the golden ratio). The idea is
simple: two numbers are said to be in this ratio if the sum of the two
numbers to the larger of the two is equal to the ratio of the larger to
the smaller (like in the rectangles above). You can also converge on
this fraction by taking the ratio between any two consecutive numbers in
the Fibonacci sequence (or in the Lucas series).
As the stunning
animation below shows, the remarkable thing is that the Fibonacci
series and the golden ratio seem to be beautifully manifested in various
aspects of the natural world, from the spiral shape of the nautilus to
the arrangement of petals in sunflowers and even the predatory flight of
the peregrin falcon as it hones down on its unsuspecting prey.
Need more proof that the golden ratio is a thing of beauty? Behold!

And if this has whetted your appetite, take a listen
to this episode on the Fibonacci sequence from In Our Time, with Melvyn Bragg.
Or you might also be interested in
The Secret Life of Chaos, and how order can arise out or disorder.
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