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Tuesday 24 December 2019

Fractal Pattern in a Quantum Material Confirmed for the First Time!

Image by: Arkadiusz Jadczyk

The word fractal has become increasingly popular, although the concept started more than two centuries ago in the 17th century with prominent and prolific mathematician and philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibnitz. Leibnitz is believed to have addressed for the first time the notion of recursive self-similarity, and it wasn’t until 1960 that the concept was formally stabilized both theoretically and practically, through the mathematical development and computerized visualizations by Benoit Mandelbrot, who settled on the name “fractal”.
Fractals are defined mainly by three characteristics:
  1. Self-similarity: identical or very similar shapes and forms at all scales.
  2. Iteration: a recursive relationship limited only by computer capacity. With sufficiently high performance, the iterations could be infinite. This allows for very detailed shapes at every scale, that modify with respect to the first iteration, manifesting the original shape at some levels of iteration. Because of this, fractals may have emergent properties, which make them a suitable tool for complex systems.
  3. Fractal dimension, or fractional dimensions: describes the counter-intuitive notion that a measured length changes with the length of the measuring stick used; it quantifies how the number of scaled measuring sticks required to measure, for example, a coastline, changes with the scale applied to the stick.
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The fractal dimension of a curve can be explained intuitively thinking of a fractal line as an object too detailed to be one-dimensional, but too simple to be two-dimensional.7
Although fractals now-a-days are commonly used for the macroscopic regime such as the branches of a tree, a broccoli, blood vessels and many others, for the first time physicists at MIT have discovered fractal-like patterns in a quantum material. The material is neodymium nickel oxide or NdNiO3, a rare earth nickelate that conduces electricity or acts as an insulator, depending on its temperature. It also presents inhomogeneous magnetism: domains or regions with a specific magnetic orientation that vary in size and shape throughout the material. The material exhibits this peculiar electronic and magnetic behavior as a result of quantum, atomic-scale effects, and for this reason it is called a quantum material.
The researchers had to design a very special X-ray-focusing lens in order to map the size, shape, and orientation of magnetic domains point by point at different temperatures, confirming that the material formed magnetic domains below a certain critical temperature. Above this temperature, the domains disappeared erasing the magnetic order. Nevertheless, if they cooled the sample back to below the critical temperature, the magnetic domains reappeared almost in the same place as before! This means that the system has memory, which was very unexpected. One could have a system robust against external perturbations, even if subjected to heat, such that the information is not lost.
Secondly, after mapping the material’s magnetic domains and measuring the size of each domain, the researchers counted the number of domains of a given size and plotted their number as a function of size. The resulting distribution showed the same pattern again and again, no matter what range of domain size they focused on. They found that these magnetic patterns have a fractal nature!
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“It was completely unexpected — it was serendipity.”
-Riccardo Comin, assistant professor of physics at MIT.
Because the material acts as an insulator or conductor depending on the temperature, scientists are exploring neodymium nickel oxide for neuromorphic devices — devices that mimic biological neurons. Here, temperature would play the role of voltage in the biological system, which is active or inactive depending on the voltage that it receives. Another potential application is resilient, magnetic data storage devices.

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