What is Fractal Geometry?

Fractal geometry abandons the “flat, fixed, scale-independent” structure of classical Euclidean geometry and instead describes a geometry that is:

  • scale-dependent,
  • self-repeating,
  • composed of spiral or multi-layered motifs,
  • preserving the same structure as scale increases.

This suggests that the universe is not built from “straight lines and circles,” but from spiral-scaled motifs.

1. The Three Fundamental Properties of Fractal Geometry

1) Self-similarity

When you enlarge or shrink a structure, the same motif reappears.

Examples:

  • Galaxy → spiral
  • Hurricane → spiral
  • Vortex → spiral
  • DNA → spiral
  • Atomic orbital → spiral density
  • Protein folding → spiral motif chain

Therefore, fractal geometry captures the universal motif language of the universe.

2) Scale-dependent measurement

Euclidean geometry: A length, angle, or area is independent of scale. Fractal geometry: A length, angle, or area changes with scale.

For example, the length of a coastline:

  • Measure with a 100 km ruler → short
  • Measure with a 1 km ruler → longer
  • Measure with a 1 m ruler → much longer

Because the structure produces new detail at every scale.

This forms the basis of fractal mechanics: Physical quantities (energy,

momentum, density) change with scale.

3) Fractal dimension (D)

Euclidean dimensions:

  • Point: 0
  • Line: 1
  • Surface: 2
  • Volume: 3

Fractal dimension is not an integer:

1 < D < 2 (curved lines)

2 < D < 3 (curved surfaces)

This directly connects to the “scale derivative” concept of fractal mechanics:

𝑑 / 𝑑𝑟 → 𝑑 / 𝑑(𝑟𝛼)

Here, 𝛼 is the derivative counterpart of fractal dimension.

2. Fractal Geometry = Spiral Geometry

In fractal mechanics, fractal geometry is not classical “broken-line” fractals but spiral fractals.

The fundamental motif is:

𝑟𝛼 and 𝑒i(𝑘𝑟𝛼)

These two expressions define the physical meaning of fractal geometry:

  • 𝑟𝛼: scale transformation
  • 𝑒i(𝑘𝑟𝛼): spiral phase transformation

Thus, the FM wave function:

Ψf = 𝐴𝑟q 𝑒i(𝑘𝑟𝛼 + 𝑚𝜙)

is a complete definition of spiral-fractal geometry.

3. Physical Interpretation of Fractal Geometry

Fractal geometry means the following in physical systems:

1) Space is not flat; it is a scale-dependent manifold

Euclidean space:

𝑑𝑠2 = 𝑑𝑥2 + 𝑑𝑦2 + 𝑑𝑧2

Fractal space:

𝑑𝑠f 2 = 𝑟2(𝛼-1)(𝑑𝑥2 + 𝑑𝑦2 + 𝑑𝑧2)

This is the scaled version of Einstein’s metric tensor.

2) Energy and density change with scale

𝜌f (𝑟) ∼ 𝑟q

This explains everything from atomic densities to galactic densities.

3) Forces appear as spiral resonance

Fractal geometry interprets forces not as “linear interactions” but as spiral harmony/mismatch.

4. One-Sentence Summary

Fractal geometry states that the universe is a scale-dependent, self-similar structure that repeats the same spiral motif at every scale.

Axioms of Fractal Geometry (Ümit Arslan Model)

10-item complete axiom list

Axiom 1 – Space is scale-dependent

Space is not classical Euclidean space; every point carries a scale transformation

𝑟 → 𝑟𝛼

Axiom 2 – Geometry is self-similar

Every physical structure is a repetition of the same motif at different scales.

𝐹(𝜆𝑟) = 𝜆𝐷𝐹(𝑟)

Axiom 3 – Measurement depends on scale

Length, area, and volume change with scale.

𝐿(𝜖) ∝ 𝜖1-𝐷

Axiom 4 – The fractal derivative exists

Instead of the classical derivative, the scale derivative is used.

𝑑 / 𝑑𝑟 → 𝑑 / 𝑑(𝑟𝛼)

Axiom 5 – The fractal Laplacian exists

The classical Laplacian is replaced by a scaled Laplacian.

f 2 = ( ∂2 / ∂(𝑟𝛼)2 ) + ( 1 / 𝑟𝛼 ) ( ∂ / ∂(𝑟𝛼) ) + ( 1 / ∂(𝑟𝛼)2 ) (∂2 / ∂𝜃2 ) + ⋯

Axiom 6 – Density changes with scale

Every physical density follows a power law.

𝜌(𝑟) ∝ 𝑟q

Axiom 7 – The fundamental motif is the spiral

The wave function is spiral-fractal.

Ψf = 𝐴𝑟q 𝑒i(𝑘𝑟𝛼 + 𝑚𝜙)

Axiom 8 – Forces are spiral resonance

Force is phase harmony or mismatch between fractal motifs.

𝐹 ∼ ∇f Φ

Axiom 9 – Dynamics preserve scale invariance

Every physical process keeps the same form under scale transformation.

ℒ(𝑟) = ℒ(𝑟𝛼)

Axiom 10 – Classical physics is the limit of fractal geometry

Euclidean geometry and classical physics are special cases.

𝛼 = 1, 𝑞 = 0, 𝐷 ∈ {1,2,3}

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