![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwWWPMMYfpPmv3lqmiS9UFmlm4kugneTvNyD5Ltd3dRWlz-ayycEDSPOGCfoYzXWvQW1h4E_PO2YKxo03aFoLoGFvq-WLmEDuMs6pYnqwWRnr6zW7wpduSoMxs1jFVbjzBBlEs2w/s400/earth.jpg)
Tobias Friedrich of the Max Planck Institut has used custom map tiles with the Google Maps API to display a number of large rotor-router aggregations.
Here's a little explanation of the rotor-router model (also known as 'Propp Machine'),
"Given an arbitrary graph, a random walk of a chip is a path which begins at a given starting point and chooses the next node with equal probability out of the set of its current neighbours. Random walks have been used to model a wide variety of processes in economics, physics, medicine, and mathematics."
That explanation doesn't help me much, but the maps sure are purty.
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