Technically, you can't. The Koch snowflake is self-similar. So the perimeter is infinity.
Robert Koch
Light per se is not fractal, but I have done work as a theoretician that indicates that photons can interfere with one another to form fractal patterns. See the links for further information on my own investigations. I hope I have been a real help. (The first answer someone posted was "not spatial but fractal." I am not sure what he meant, but I include this answer here out of respect for the original contributor.)
Ida Koch has written: 'Prostitution' -- subject(s): Prostitution, Social work with prostitutes
To work out perimeter you always add I need to remember that
Paul Erhlich. He was working for Robert Koch but when KOch fell in Erhlich carried on his work :D
The ideas behind fractal geometry came out of work undertaken in the 19th century by mathematicians like Bernard Bolzano, Bernhard Riemann and Karl Weierstrass. They were studying functions which were continuous [everywhere] but not differentiable [almost anywhere]. The term "fractal" was first used by a modern mathematician called Benoit Mandelbrot.
Henning Koch has written: 'Politiforskning i Norden' -- subject(s): Criminal investigation, Police 'Love Doesn't Work'
Plus the side
Robert koch
Robert Koch
Robert Koch
Koch had helped the progress of medicine as he was able to stain specific microbes with a chemical dye, this has helped many other reasearches using this method. Factors that helped Koch was individualism and technology.