Main cardioid and period bulbs The
main cardioid is the period 1 continent. It is the region of parameters c for which the map f_c(z) = z^2 + c has an
attracting fixed point. The set comprises all parameters of the form c(\mu) := \frac\mu2\left(1-\frac\mu2\right) where \mu lies within the
open unit disk. Attached to the left of the main cardioid at the point c=-3/4, the
period-2 bulb is visible. The q periodic
Fatou components containing the attracting cycle meet at the
\alpha-fixed point. If these are labelled counterclockwise as U_0,\dots,U_{q-1}, then component U_j is mapped by f_c to the component U_{j+p\,(\operatorname{mod} q)}. Hypothetical non-hyperbolic components of the Mandelbrot set are often referred to as "queer" or ghost components. For real quadratic polynomials, this question was proved in the 1990s independently by Lyubich and by Graczyk and Świątek. (Note that hyperbolic components intersecting the real axis correspond exactly to periodic windows in the
Feigenbaum diagram. So this result states that such windows exist near every parameter in the diagram.) Not every hyperbolic component can be reached by a sequence of direct bifurcations from the main cardioid of the Mandelbrot set. Such a component can be reached by a sequence of direct bifurcations from the main cardioid of a little Mandelbrot copy (see below). Each of the hyperbolic components has a
center, which is a point
c such that the inner Fatou domain for f_c(z) has a super-attracting cycle—that is, that the attraction is infinite. This means that the cycle contains the critical point 0, so that 0 is iterated back to itself after some iterations. Therefore, f_c^n(0) = 0 for some
n. If we call this polynomial Q^{n}(c) (letting it depend on
c instead of
z), we have that Q^{n+1}(c) = Q^{n}(c)^{2} + c and that the degree of Q^{n}(c) is 2^{n-1}. Therefore, constructing the centers of the hyperbolic components is possible by successively solving the equations Q^{n}(c) = 0, n = 1, 2, 3, .... The number of new centers produced in each step is given by Sloane's .
Local connectivity It is conjectured that the Mandelbrot set is
locally connected. This conjecture is known as
MLC (for
Mandelbrot locally connected). By the work of
Adrien Douady and
John H. Hubbard, this conjecture would result in a simple abstract "pinched disk" model of the Mandelbrot set. In particular, it would imply the important
hyperbolicity conjecture mentioned above. The work of
Jean-Christophe Yoccoz established local connectivity of the Mandelbrot set at all finitely
renormalizable parameters; that is, roughly speaking those contained only in finitely many small Mandelbrot copies. Since then, local connectivity has been proved at many other points of M, but the full conjecture is still open.
Self-similarity in the Mandelbrot set shown by zooming in on a round feature while panning in the negative-
x direction. The display center pans left from the fifth to the seventh round feature (−1.4002, 0) to (−1.4011, 0) while the view magnifies by a factor of 21.78 to approximate the square of the
Feigenbaum ratio. The Mandelbrot set is
self-similar under magnification in the neighborhoods of the
Misiurewicz points. It is also conjectured to be self-similar around generalized
Feigenbaum points (e.g., −1.401155 or −0.1528 + 1.0397
i), in the sense of converging to a limit set. The Mandelbrot set in general is quasi-self-similar, as small slightly different versions of itself can be found at arbitrarily small scales. These copies of the Mandelbrot set are all slightly different, mostly because of the thin threads connecting them to the main body of the set.
Further results The
Hausdorff dimension of the
boundary of the Mandelbrot set equals 2 as determined by a result of
Mitsuhiro Shishikura. In the
Blum–Shub–Smale model of
real computation, the Mandelbrot set is not computable, but its complement is
computably enumerable. Many simple objects (e.g., the graph of exponentiation) are also not computable in the BSS model. At present, it is unknown whether the Mandelbrot set is computable in models of real computation based on
computable analysis, which correspond more closely to the intuitive notion of "plotting the set by a computer". Hertling has shown that the Mandelbrot set is computable in this model if the hyperbolicity conjecture is true.
Relationship with Julia sets As a consequence of the definition of the Mandelbrot set, there is a close correspondence between the
geometry of the Mandelbrot set at a given point and the structure of the corresponding
Julia set. For instance, a value of c belongs to the Mandelbrot set if and only if the corresponding Julia set is connected. Thus, the Mandelbrot set may be seen as a map of the connected Julia sets. This principle is exploited in virtually all deep results on the Mandelbrot set. For example, Shishikura proved that, for a dense set of parameters in the boundary of the Mandelbrot set, the Julia set has
Hausdorff dimension two, and then transfers this information to the parameter plane. Similarly, Yoccoz first proved the local connectivity of Julia sets, before establishing it for the Mandelbrot set at the corresponding parameters. The part of the Mandelbrot set connected to the main cardioid at this bifurcation point is called the '''
p/
q-limb'''. Computer experiments suggest that the
diameter of the limb tends to zero like \tfrac{1}{q^2}. The best current estimate known is the Yoccoz-inequality, which states that the size tends to zero like \tfrac{1}{q}. A period-
q limb will have q-1 "antennae" at the top of its limb. The period of a given bulb is determined by counting these antennas. The numerator of the rotation number,
p, is found by numbering each antenna counterclockwise from the limb from 1 to q-1 and finding which antenna is the shortest. This experiment was performed independently by many people in the early 1990s, if not before; for instance by David Boll. Analogous observations have also been made at the parameters c=-5/4 and c=1/4 (with a necessary modification in the latter case). In 2001, Aaron Klebanoff published a (non-conceptual) proof for this phenomenon at c=1/4 In 2023, Paul Siewert developed, in his Bachelor thesis, a conceptual proof also for the value c=1/4, explaining why the number pi occurs (geometrically as half the circumference of the unit circle). In 2025, the three high school students Thies Brockmöller, Oscar Scherz, and Nedim Srkalovic extended the theory and the conceptual proof to all the infinitely many bifurcation points in the Mandelbrot set.
Fibonacci sequence in the Mandelbrot set The Mandelbrot Set features a fundamental cardioid shape adorned with numerous bulbs directly attached to it. Understanding the arrangement of these bulbs requires a detailed examination of the Mandelbrot Set's boundary. As one zooms into specific portions with a geometric perspective, precise deducible information about the location within the boundary and the corresponding dynamical behavior for parameters drawn from associated bulbs emerges. The iteration of the quadratic polynomial f_c(z) = z^2 + c, where c is a parameter drawn from one of the bulbs attached to the main cardioid within the Mandelbrot Set, gives rise to maps featuring attracting cycles of a specified period q and a rotation number p/q. In this context, the attracting cycle of exhibits rotational motion around a central fixed point, completing an average of p/q revolutions at each iteration. The bulbs within the Mandelbrot Set are distinguishable by both their attracting cycles and the geometric features of their structure. Each bulb is characterized by an antenna attached to it, emanating from a junction point and displaying a certain number of spokes indicative of its period. For instance, the 2/5 bulb is identified by its attracting cycle with a rotation number of 2/5. Its distinctive antenna-like structure comprises a junction point from which five spokes emanate. Among these spokes, called the principal spoke is directly attached to the 2/5 bulb, and the 'smallest' non-principal spoke is positioned approximately 2/5 of a turn counterclockwise from the principal spoke, providing a distinctive identification as a 2/5-bulb. This raises the question: how does one discern which among these spokes is the 'smallest'? there are precisely two external rays landing at the root point of a satellite hyperbolic component of the Mandelbrot Set. Each of these rays possesses an external angle that undergoes doubling under the angle doubling map \theta\mapsto 2\theta. According to this theorem, when two rays land at the same point, no other rays between them can intersect. Thus, the 'size' of this region is measured by determining the length of the arc between the two angles. The arrangement of bulbs within the Mandelbrot set follows a remarkable pattern governed by the
Farey tree, a structure encompassing all rationals between 0 and 1. This ordering positions the bulbs along the boundary of the main cardioid precisely according to the
rational numbers in the
unit interval. Intriguingly, the denominators of the periods of circular bulbs at sequential scales in the Mandelbrot Set conform to the
Fibonacci number sequence, the sequence that is made by adding the previous two terms – 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21... The Fibonacci sequence manifests in the number of spiral arms at a unique spot on the Mandelbrot set, mirrored both at the top and bottom. This distinctive location demands the highest number of iterations of for a detailed fractal visual, with intricate details repeating as one zooms in.
Image gallery of a zoom sequence The boundary of the Mandelbrot set shows more intricate detail the closer one looks or
magnifies the image. The following is an example of an image sequence zooming to a selected
c value. The area shown is known as the "seahorse valley", which is a region of the Mandelbrot set centred on the point −0.75 + 0.1
i. The magnification of the last image relative to the first one is about 1010 to 1. Relating to an ordinary
computer monitor, it represents a section of a Mandelbrot set with a diameter of 4 million kilometers. Mandel zoom 00 mandelbrot set.jpg|Start. Mandelbrot set with continuously colored environment. Mandel zoom 01 head and shoulder.jpg|Gap between the "head" and the "body", also called the "seahorse valley" Mandel zoom 02 seehorse valley.jpg|Double-spirals on the left, "seahorses" on the right Mandel zoom 03 seehorse.jpg|"Seahorse" upside down The seahorse "body" is composed by 25 "spokes" consisting of two groups of 12 "spokes" each and one "spoke" connecting to the main cardioid. These two groups can be attributed by some metamorphosis to the two "fingers" of the "upper hand" of the Mandelbrot set; therefore, the number of "spokes" increases from one "seahorse" to the next by 2; the "hub" is a
Misiurewicz point. Between the "upper part of the body" and the "tail", there is a distorted copy of the Mandelbrot set, called a "satellite". File:Mandel zoom 04 seehorse tail.jpg|The central endpoint of the "seahorse tail" is also a
Misiurewicz point. File:Mandel zoom 05 tail part.jpg|Part of the "tail" – there is only one path consisting of the thin structures that lead through the whole "tail". This zigzag path passes the "hubs" of the large objects with 25 "spokes" at the inner and outer border of the "tail"; thus the Mandelbrot set is a
simply connected set, which means there are no islands and no loop roads around a hole. File:Mandel zoom 06 double hook.jpg|Satellite. The two "seahorse tails" (also called
dendritic structures) are the beginning of a series of concentric crowns with the satellite in the center. File:Mandel zoom 07 satellite.jpg|Each of these crowns consists of similar "seahorse tails"; their number increases with powers of 2, a typical phenomenon in the environment of satellites. The unique path to the spiral center passes the satellite from the groove of the cardioid to the top of the "antenna" on the "head". File:Mandel zoom 08 satellite antenna.jpg|"Antenna" of the satellite. There are several satellites of second order. File:Mandel zoom 09 satellite head and shoulder.jpg|The "seahorse valley" For example, while calculating whether or not a given c value is bound or unbound, while it remains bound, the maximum value that this number reaches can be compared to the c value at that location. If the sum of squares method is used, the calculated number would be max:(real^2 + imaginary^2) − c:(real^2 + imaginary^2). The magnitude of this calculation can be rendered as a value on a gradient. This produces results like the following, gradients with distinct edges and contours as the boundaries are approached. The animations serve to highlight the gradient boundaries. File:Mandelbrot full gradient.gif|Animated gradient structure inside the Mandelbrot set File:Mandelbrot inner gradient.gif|Animated gradient structure inside the Mandelbrot set, detail File:Mandelbrot gradient iterations.gif|Rendering of progressive iterations from 285 to approximately 200,000 with corresponding bounded gradients animated File:Mandelbrot gradient iterations thumb.gif|Thumbnail for gradient in progressive iterations ==Generalizations==