Turing Patterns
In 1952, Alan Turing published a paper called “The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis.” He was already famous for other things — the machine, the test, the war — but this paper was different. It wasn’t about computation. It was about how a leopard gets its spots. The idea is almost absurdly simple. Take two chemicals. Call them U and V. U feeds itself, diffuses quickly, and gets consumed when it meets V. V feeds on U, diffuses slowly, and decays on its own. Pour them onto a surface and let them go. ...