Scientists solve decades-old 2D physics puzzle — Chaotic growth in a 2D quantum system obeys statistical laws

Macro ice crystal growth illustrating chaotic surface formation described by the KPZ equation.
Ice crystals forming at the microscopic level — an everyday example of the kind of chaotic, random surface growth that the KPZ equation describes and that researchers have now confirmed extends to 2D quantum systems. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

Researchers at the University of Würzburg have demonstrated, for the first time, that chaotic growth in a 2D quantum system follows the Kardar–Parisi–Zhang (KPZ) equation, confirming a 40-year-old physics theory. For decades, physicists have believed that even highly disordered growth — from spreading flames to growing bacteria — follows hidden statistical rules.

Until now, the KPZ model, which describes how rough, uneven surfaces evolve under random conditions, had only been verified in simple, single-dimension systems, as extending it to more realistic 2D environments remained experimentally out of reach due to the extreme speeds and scales involved. The researchers’ findings, published in the Science journal, close a long-standing gap in the field, proving that the theory does indeed extend to 2D systems

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To achieve this, the team engineered a highly controlled quantum system using a gallium arsenide (GaAs) semiconductor cooled to −269.15°C (−452.47°F), near absolute zero. By continuously illuminating the material with a laser, they generated short-lived hybrid particles known as polaritons — a mix of light and matter that form and decay within picoseconds.

These polaritons behave like a rapidly evolving “growth” system. As they are created and spread across the material, their distribution changes in both space and time, allowing researchers to track how the system develops under inherently random conditions.

Using spectroscopy and Michelson interferometry, the team was able to precisely monitor this evolution, capturing how fluctuations in the system scale and spread. Their analysis revealed that the behavior of the polaritons closely matches the statistical patterns predicted by the KPZ equation in two dimensions.

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Etiido Uko
News Contributor

Etiido Uko is an engineer and technical writer with over nine years of experience in documentation and reporting. He is deeply passionate about all things gadgets, technology, and engineering.

  • Ralston18
    Well and good.

    However, I wonder how and why this article is intended to attract computer and IT enthusiasts?

    What is the real take-away that informs and proves helpful to such folks?
    Reply