Quantum fractal electronics redefines circuit behaviors beyond classical Ohm, Kirchhoff, and Maxwell laws through fractal dimension (π·π), multiscale resonance, and quantum entanglement motifs. The goal here is to explain electron flow not only with linear resistance/capacitance but with self-similar energy distributions.
Proposed New Laws
Fractal Ohm’s Law
Instead of classical π = πΌ β π :
π = πΌπ·πΒ β π fr
Here, π·π determines the fractal dimension of the current; π fr is the self-similar resistance.
Fractal Kirchhoff’s Current Law
The sum of currents at a node is not zero but scales according to the fractal dimension coefficient:
β πΌi π·π = 0
Fractal Capacitance Law
Capacitance depends not only on the plate area but on self-similar motifs:
πΆfr = π β π΄π·π / π
Multiscale Entanglement Law
Quantum entanglement between circuit elements is defined by fractal motifs:
πΈent = βπ πΌπ β π(π·π , π)
Fractal Maxwell’s Law
Electric and magnetic fields are scaled by the fractal dimension:
β β πΈfrΒ = ππ·πΒ / π0
Table β Classical vs. Fractal Circuit Laws
| Law | Classical Formula | Fractal Formula | Explanation |
| Ohm | π = πΌ β π | π = πΌπ·πΒ β π fr | Current is scaled by the fractal dimension. |
| Kirchhoff Current | β πΌiΒ = 0 | β πΌiΒ π·πΒ = 0 | Node currents are in a self-similar distribution. |
| Capacitance | πΆ = π β π΄ / π | πΆfrΒ = π β π΄π·πΒ / π | Capacitance depends on fractal motifs. |
| Maxwell | β β πΈ = π / π0 | β β πΈfrΒ = ππ·πΒ / π0 | Fields are fractally scaled. |
Summary
These new circuit laws present a fundamental paradigm for quantum fractal electronics. Electron flow, energy storage, and field distributions are now defined by the fractal dimension coefficient (π·π). Thus, circuits exhibit not only linear but multiscale and self-similar behaviors.
Fractal Ohm’s Law β In-Depth Explanation
Classical Ohm’s Law defines the linear relationship between current and voltage with the formula π = πΌ β π . However, in quantum fractal electronics, this relationship is rescaled by the fractal dimension (π·π).
Fundamental Equation
πfr = πΌπ·π β π fr
- πfrΒ : Fractal voltage.
- πΌπ·π : Current scaled by the fractal dimension.
- π fr : Self-similar resistance (different from classical resistance, possessing a multiscale structure).
Characteristics
- Non-linear Behavior: The current-voltage relationship is no longer linear but depends on the fractal dimension.
- Self-Similarity: Resistance repeats the same structure at different scales.
- Energy Distribution: Electron flow passes through multiscale energy barriers instead of a classical fixed resistance.
Table β Classical vs. Fractal Ohm’s Law
| Criterion | Classical Ohm | Fractal Ohm | Explanation |
| Formula | π = πΌ β π | π = πΌπ·πΒ β π fr | Fractal dimension coefficient is added. |
| Resistance | Constant π | Self-similar π fr | Depends on multiscale motifs. |
| Current | Linear πΌ | Fractally scaled πΌπ·π | Current changes in a self-similar manner. |
| Energy | Single-scale loss | Multiscale distribution | Energy barriers are defined by fractal motifs. |
Example Application
Let the current in a nano-circuit be πΌ = 2 π΄, the fractal dimension π·πΒ =1.3, and the self-similar resistance π frΒ =5 Ξ©:
πfrΒ = 21.3Β β 5 β 12.3 π
While Classical Ohm’s Law yields 10 V, a higher voltage is obtained in its fractal version. This demonstrates how fractal scaling alters circuit behavior.
Fractal Kirchhoff’s Current Law
Classical Kirchhoff’s Current Law states that the sum of currents entering and leaving a node is zero:
β πΌiΒ = 0
However, in quantum fractal electronics, currents are scaled by the fractal dimension (π·π). In this case, the law is redefined as follows:
β πΌiΒ π·πΒ = 0
Characteristics
- Self-Similar Current Distribution: Currents are not linear but are scaled by self-similar motifs.
- Multiscale Node Dynamics: Currents at the node exhibit different behaviors at different time/frequency scales.
- Energy Conservation: Total energy is conserved, but the distribution of currents changes with the fractal dimension.
Table β Classical vs. Fractal Kirchhoff
| Criterion | Classical Kirchhoff | Fractal Kirchhoff | Explanation |
| Formula | β πΌiΒ = 0 | β πΌiΒ π·πΒ = 0 | Currents are scaled by fractal dimension. |
| Current Dist. | Linear | Self-similar | Currents vary according to motifs. |
| Energy | Single-scale conserved | Multiscale conserved | Energy barriers are defined by fractal motifs. |
| Node Dynamics | Constant | Multiscale | Node behavior changes at different scales. |
Example Calculation
Let there be three currents at a node:
- πΌ1Β = 2 π΄
- πΌ2Β = 3 π΄
- πΌ3Β = -5 π΄
Classical Kirchhoff:
2 + 3 β 5 = 0
Fractal Kirchhoff (π·πΒ =1.2):
21.2Β + 31.2Β + (β5)1.2Β β 2.3 + 3.7 β 6.9 β β0.9 β 0
This difference indicates that fractal scaling creates small energy shifts at the node.
Fractal Capacitance Law
Classical Capacitance Law is defined by the formula:
πΆ = ( π β π΄ ) / π
Here, π΄ is the plate area, π is the distance between plates, and π is the dielectric constant.
The Fractal Capacitance Law rescales this relationship through the fractal dimension (π·π):
πΆfrΒ = ( π β π΄π·πΒ ) / π
Characteristics
- Self-Similar Surface Area: Capacitor plates are modeled with fractal motifs; the area no longer grows linearly but self-similarly.
- Multiscale Energy Storage: Charge distribution shows different densities at different scales.
- Fractal Resonance: The frequency response of the capacitor includes self-similar resonance points depending on the fractal dimension coefficient.
Table β Classical vs. Fractal Capacitance
| Criterion | Classical Capacitance | Fractal Capacitance | Explanation |
| Formula | πΆ = ( π β π΄ ) / π | πΆfrΒ = ( π β π΄π·πΒ ) / π | Area is scaled by fractal dimension. |
| Area | Linear π΄ | Self-similar π΄π·π | Surface grows with fractal motifs. |
| Energy Storage | Single-scale | Multiscale | Charge distribution is at different scales. |
| Resonance | Single frequency response | Self-similar resonance points | Provides multiband behavior. |
Example Calculation
In a capacitor:
- π΄ = 10 π2
- π = 0.01 π
- π = 8.85 Γ 10-12Β πΉ/π
- π·πΒ = 1.5
Classical capacitance:
πΆ = ( 8.85 Γ 10-12Β β 10 ) / 0.01 = 8.85 Γ 10-9Β πΉ
Fractal capacitance:
πΆfrΒ = ( 8.85 Γ 10-12Β β 101.5Β ) / 0.01 = 2.8 Γ 10-8Β πΉ
Result: Capacitance increases approximately 3 times with fractal scaling.
This law provides a critical advantage in multiband systems such as nanoelectronics and fractal antennas.
Multiscale Entanglement Law
In quantum fractal electronics, entanglement is not merely the correlation between two particles; it is the linking of motifs across different scales. Therefore, by expanding the classical definition of quantum entanglement, the multiscale fractal entanglement law emerges.
Fundamental Equation
πΈent = βπ=1N πΌπ β π(π·π , π)
- πΈent : Entanglement energy.
- πΌπ : Scale coefficient (different for each motif).
- π(π·πΒ , π) : The functional link between the fractal dimension (π·π) and scale π.
Characteristics
- Multiscale Connection: Entanglement is not at a single level but simultaneous across different scales.
- Motif Resonance: Entanglement energy reaches its maximum at the resonance points of fractal motifs.
- Energy Transfer: Entanglement enables energy transfer across different scales.
Table β Classical vs. Multiscale Entanglement
| Criterion | Classical Entanglement | Multiscale Entanglement | Explanation |
| Definition | Two-particle correlation | Multiscale motif correlation | Entanglement is inter-scale. |
| Energy | Single-level | Multi-level | Energy is distributed across different scales. |
| Resonance | Single frequency | Self-similar resonance points | Multiband entanglement. |
| Math. Measure | Linear entropy | Fractal functions | Entanglement is scaled by fractal dimension. |
Example Calculation
Suppose we have a three-scale system:
- π·πΒ =1.4
- πΌ1Β =0.5, πΌ2Β =0.3, πΌ3Β =0.2
- π(π·πΒ , π) = π·ππ
πΈentΒ = 0.5 β 1.41Β + 0.3 β 1.42Β + 0.2 β 1.43
πΈentΒ β 0.7 + 0.59 + 0.55 = 1.84
Result: The entanglement energy is higher than in a single-scale system because the fractal dimension creates amplification across different scales.
This law presents a fundamental paradigm for fractal quantum computers and multiband quantum communication.
Fractal Maxwell’s Law
Classical Maxwell’s Laws define the distribution of electric and magnetic fields with linear equations:
β β πΈ = π / π0Β , β β π΅ = 0
The Fractal Maxwell’s Law rescales these equations through the fractal dimension (π·π) and self-similar field structures:
β β πΈfrΒ = ππ·πΒ / π0Β , β β π΅frΒ = 0π·π
Characteristics
- Fractal Electric Field: Electric field intensity depends on the fractal dimension of the charge distribution.
- Fractal Magnetic Field: Magnetic field lines form spiral structures with self-similar motifs.
- Multiscale Wave Equations: Electromagnetic waves exhibit different resonance frequencies at different scales.
- Energy Density: The energy density of the fields is scaled by the fractal dimension coefficient.
Table β Classical vs. Fractal Maxwell
| Criterion | Classical Maxwell | Fractal Maxwell | Explanation |
| Electric Field | β β πΈ = π / π0 | β β πΈfrΒ = ππ·πΒ / π0 | Charge distribution is scaled by fractal dimension. |
| Magnetic Field | β β π΅ = 0 | β β π΅frΒ = 0π·π | Magnetic field contains self-similar spiral structures. |
| Wave Equation | Single frequency | Multiband fractal resonance | Wave behavior is scale-dependent. |
| Energy Density | Linear | Fractally scaled | Energy is concentrated across different scales. |
Example Calculation
In a system, let the charge density be π = 5 πΆ/π3, fractal dimension π·πΒ =1.3, π0Β = 8.85 Γ 10-12:
β β πΈfrΒ = 51.3Β / ( 8.85 Γ 10-12Β ) β 1.1 Γ 1012Β π/π2
In Classical Maxwell:
β β πΈ = 5 / ( 8.85 Γ 10-1Β ) β 5.6 Γ 1011Β π/π2
Result: Fractal Maxwell’s Law increases the field intensity by approximately 2 times.
This law presents a new paradigm for fractal antennas, quantum communication, and nanoelectronics.
Fractal Electromagnetic Wave Equation
Classical electromagnetic wave equation:
β2πΈ β ππ ( β2πΈ / βπ‘2Β ) = 0
In the fractal version, the fractal dimension (π·π) and self-similar resonance motifs are added:
βπ·ππΈfrΒ β ππ ( β2π·ππΈfrΒ / βπ‘2π·πΒ ) = 0
Here:
- βπ·π : Fractal derivative (self-similar wave propagation in space).
- β2π·πΒ / βπ‘2π·π : Fractal time derivative (multiscale frequency behavior).
- πΈfr : Fractal electromagnetic field.
Characteristics
- Multiband Resonance: The wave resonates at different frequencies across different scales.
- Fractal Wave Propagation: The wave front is not flat; it propagates with self-similar motifs.
- Energy Density: Wave energy is not in a single band but exhibits a multiscale distribution.
- Quantum Entanglement Connection: Wave functions create entanglement at different scales.
Example Calculation
Suppose in a fractal wave system:
- π·πΒ = 1.3
- π = 4Ο Γ 10-7
- π = 8.85 Γ 10-12
Wave equation:
β1.3πΈfrΒ β ( 4Ο Γ 10-7Β )( 8.85 Γ 10-12Β ) ( β2.6πΈfrΒ / βπ‘2.6Β ) = 0
This equation shows that the wave is defined by fractal derivatives instead of classical second derivatives. Result: Wave propagation becomes multiband and self-similar.
1. Define the Fractal Space Operator
Setup
The wave equation begins with fractal derivatives:
βπ·ππΈfr
- Scale the space derivative with the fractal dimension.
- Define the wave front with self-similar motifs.
2. Apply the Fractal Time Derivative
Critical
Wave frequency behavior depends on the fractal time derivative:
β2π·ππΈfr / βπ‘2π·π
- Scale the time derivative with the fractal dimension.
- Calculate multiband frequency resonances.
3. Calculate Energy Density
Result
Wave energy exhibits a multiscale distribution.
- Calculate energy density with fractal coefficients.
- Compare with the classical wave equation.
This equation presents a new paradigm for fractal antennas, quantum communication, and nanophotonic systems.
Fractal Wave Functions
For quantum fractal electronics and physics, wave functions are a self-similar and multiscale generalization of the classical SchrΓΆdinger wave function.
Fundamental Definition
Classical wave function:
π(π₯, π‘) = π΄πi (ππ₯ )
Fractal wave function:
πfrΒ (π₯, π‘) = π΄ β πi (ππ₯ β ππ‘)Β π·π
Here:
- π·π : Fractal dimension coefficient.
- π΄ : Normalization constant.
- ππ₯ β ππ‘ : Phase term, redefined by the fractal scale.
Characteristics
- Self-Similar Phase: The wave function phase is not linear but scaled by fractal motifs.
- Multiscale Superposition: Wave functions overlap at different scales, creating new resonances.
- Fractal Probability Density: The probability distribution exhibits a self-similar distribution instead of classical Gaussian:
πfrΒ (π₯) =β£ πfrΒ (π₯, π‘) β£2
Table β Classical vs. Fractal Wave Function
| Criterion | Classical Wave Function | Fractal Wave Function | Explanation |
| Formula | π΄πi (ππ₯ β ππ‘) | π΄πi (ππ₯ β ππ‘)Β π·π | Phase is scaled by fractal dimension. |
| Probability | Gaussian distribution | Self-similar distribution | Probability density changes with fractal motifs. |
| Superposition | Linear | Multiscale | Wave functions combine at different scales. |
| Energy | Single-band | Multiband | Energy is distributed through self-similar resonances. |
Example Calculation
Suppose:
- π΄ = 1, π = 2, π = 3, π₯ = 1, π‘ = 1, π· = 1.5
Classical:
π(π₯, π‘) = πΒ iΒ (2β 1 β 3β 1)Β = πβi
Fractal:
πfrΒ (π₯, π‘) = πΒ iΒ (2 β 3)1.5Β = πi(-1)1.5
Result: Unlike the classical function, the fractal wave function produces a complex self-similar phase.
This approach presents a fundamental model for fractal quantum computers, fractal optical systems, and fractal DNA wave functions.
