How fractals o!
er a new way to see the quantum realm
Uncertainty is an inherent feature of all systems. It is
independent of the precision or the accuracy with which the
system is measured. It just is there, as an implicit element of the
system’s existence. And it has forced physicists to find a practical
approach to study quantum systems in ways that can circumvent
the limitations it imposes
1 of 2 The first four steps to building a Koch snowflake. - Photo: Wxs (CC BY-SA 3.0)
QUDSIA GANI,
THE GIST
Physicists use the fractal geometry approach to study quantum
systems in dimensions like 1.55 or 1.58, or in fact anything
systems in dimensions like 1.55 or 1.58, or in fact anything
between one and two dimensions
On the macroscopic scale, fractals can be seen as irregular,
complex patterns at all scales and in all views, near or far. Some
remarkable examples include human fingerprints, stumps of trees,
human veins, river networks as seen from above, veins in a plant
leaf, the edges of a snowflake, and so on
The value of fractals is that they describe a new kind of order in
systems that we may have overlooked. They pave the way to
potential new insights from otherwise familiar shapes like lines,
planes, and points, in the unfamiliar milieu of a space with non-
integer dimensions
Quantum physics is too weird for many people to understand, and part of the
weirdness is due to some of its counter-intuitive features. For example, many
quantum phenomena are bound by Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, so it is
impossible to know them with great certainty. According to this principle, we can’t
obtain the information about a particle’s position, say, until we actively check for it.
This is unlike that of, say, a football that has been kicked: we can calculate its
position based on the information that we get from Newton’s laws. In other words,
gaining information about a particle means collapsing its wavefunction. The
wavefunction is a mathematical object that contains information about the
particle, and ‘collapsing’ it means forcibly modifying it in a way that yields that
information.
Before we obtain the information about a particle’s location, however, it can be
said to be in more than one place, and possibly in ‘contact’ with other particles
even if they are physically quite far away.
What are fractal dimensions?
Uncertainty is an inherent feature of all systems. It is independent of the precision
or the accuracy with which the system is measured. It just is there, as an implicit
element of the system’s existence. And it has forced physicists to find a practical
approach to study quantum systems in ways that can circumvent the limitations it
imposes.
One of the ways in which physicists have responded is via the so-called non-
integer small dimensions, a.k.a. fractal dimensions. The dimensionality of a
quantum system is an important thing to bear in mind when physicists study its
quantum system is an important thing to bear in mind when physicists study its
properties. For instance, electrons in a one-dimensional system form a Luttinger
liquid (not a liquid per se but a model that describes the electrons’ liquid-like
behaviour); in a two-dimensional system, the particles exhibit the Hall e!ect (the
conductor develops a side-to-side voltage in the presence of a top-to-bottom
electric field and a perpendicular magnetic field).
The question obviously arises: How would a quantum system behave in non-
integer or fractal dimensions?
Physicists use the fractal geometry approach to study quantum systems in
dimensions like 1.55 or 1.58, or in fact anything between one and two dimensions.
Fractality is ubiquitous in nature, if also sometimes hidden from plain sight. A
shape is fractal if it exhibits self-similarity, i.e. if parts of it at a smaller scale
resemble parts at a larger scale. Such shapes can be easily produced by
repeatedly modifying its edges using simple rules. Consider the Koch snowflake –
a shape that begins as an equilateral triangle, and in each subsequent step, every
side becomes the base for a new triangle. After many steps, a fractal snowflake
appears.
The higher the ‘value’ of a fractal’s dimension, the greater is its ability to fill space
as its shape evolves. For example, the Koch snowflake has a fractal dimension of
around 1.26.
What do fractals look like?
On the macroscopic scale, fractals can be seen as irregular, complex patterns at all
scales and in all views, near or far. Some of the more remarkable examples of
such patterns include the design of human fingerprints, the stumps of trees, in the
shells of snails, the system of human veins, the network of rivers as seen from
high up, the splitting of veins in a plant leaf, the edges of a snowflake, a bolt of
lightning going branching o! in di!erent directions, the shapes of clouds, the
mixing of liquids of di!erent viscosity, the way tumours grow in the body, and so
on.
There are fractals in the quantum realm as well. In a study published in 2019, for
example, researchers from Switzerland and the U.S. used X-rays to study the
magnetic properties of a compound called neodymium nickel oxide. They erased
its magnetic order (the parts of its internal order imposed by magnetic fields) and
then restored it. To their surprise, they found that parts of the material’s insides
where the magnetisation was in the same direction – called magnetic domains –
had a fractal arrangement. They also found that the domains reappeared in
almost the same positions they were in before they were erased, as if the material
had a memory. All these e!ects were due to the material’s quantum physical
properties.
properties.
Another example of fractal behaviour at the microscopic scale is available in
graphene – a single-atom thick sheet of carbon atoms linked to each other. In this
setting, the surface density pattern of electrons has an almost fractal distribution.
Applications of fractality
Historically, the first attempt to apply fractal analysis in physics was for Brownian
motion – the rapid, random, zigzagging motion of small particles suspended in a
liquid medium, like pollen in water. As such, the value of fractals is that they
describe a new kind of order in systems that we may have otherwise overlooked.
They pave the way to potential new insights from otherwise familiar shapes like
lines, planes, and points, in the unfamiliar milieu of a space with non-integer
dimensions.
Researchers have also used the concept of fractality in data compression, such as
to reduce the size of an image when storing it, and to design more compact
antennae without compromising their performance. Some have also used
fractality to study patterns in galaxies and planets and, in cell biology, to make
sense of some bacteria cultures. Fractal geometry has also found applications in
chromatography and ion-exchange processes, among others.
Fractals are rooted in geometry but – like the fractal growth of branches on trees –
they have far-reaching implications, more so as they interact with di!erent natural
processes in a variety of settings. There are self-similar structures around us that
become increasingly complex with time. You just need to slow down and look
closer, and you might just glean some information that brings some quantum
mystery into focus.
Qudsia Gani is an assistant professor in the Department of Physics, Government
College for Women, Srinagar.