Butterfly in the Quantum World

The story of the most fascinating quantum fractal

By (author) Indubala I Satija

Ebook (VitalSource) - £31.35

Publication date:

06 September 2016

Length of book:

350 pages

Publisher

Morgan & Claypool Publishers

ISBN-13: 9781681742458

Butterfly in the Quantum World by Indu Satija, with contributions by Douglas Hofstadter, is the first book ever to tell the story of the "Hofstadter butterfly", a beautiful and fascinating graph lying at the heart of the quantum theory of matter. The butterfly came out of a simple-sounding question: What happens if you immerse a crystal in a magnetic field? What energies can the electrons take on? From 1930 onwards, physicists struggled to answer this question, until 1974, when graduate student Douglas Hofstadter discovered that the answer was a graph consisting of nothing but copies of itself nested down infinitely many times. This wild mathematical object caught the physics world totally by surprise, and it continues to mesmerize physicists and mathematicians today.

The butterfly plot is intimately related to many other important phenomena in number theory and physics, including Apollonian gaskets, the Foucault pendulum, quasicrystals, the quantum Hall effect and many more. Its story reflects the magic, the mystery and the simplicity of the laws of nature, and Indu Satija, in a wonderfully personal style, relates this story, enriching it with a vast number of lively historical anecdotes, many photographs, beautiful visual images and even poems, making her book a great feast for the eyes, for the mind and for the soul.
Stimulating images, illustrations and poems are included, making this book an enjoyable read. The book can be recommended for students in physics as well as mathematics. Researchers in solid state physics would also be benefit from the book. An extensive list of references on these topics is also provided.

Willi-Hans Steeb 2016 Zentralblatt MATH 1362 - 1, FIZ Karlsruhe – Leibniz Institute for Information Infrastructure