Abstract

Fractal dimension unlike topological dimension is (usually) a non-integer number which measures complexity, roughness, or irregularity of an object with respect to the space in which the set lies. It is used to characterize highly irregular objects in nature containing statistical self-similarity such as mountains, snowflakes, clouds, coastlines, borders etc.In this article, box dimension (a version of fractal dimension) of the border of Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) is computed using a multicore parallel processing algorithm based on the classical box-counting method. A power law relation is obtained from numerical simulations which relates the length of the border with the scale size and provides a very close estimate of the actual length of the KSA border within the scaling regions and scaling effects on the length of KSA border are considered. The algorithm presented in the article is shown to be highly scalable and efficient and the speedup of the algorithm is computed using Amdahl's and Gustafson's laws. For simulations, a high performance parallel computer is employed using Python codes and QGIS software.

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