The small-angle scattering curves of deterministic mass fractals are studied
and analyzed in the momentum space. In the fractal region, the curve I(q)q^D is
found to be log-periodic with a good accuracy, and the period is equal to the
scaling factor of the fractal. Here D and I(q) are the fractal dimension and
the scattering intensity, respectively. The number of periods of this curve
coincides with the number of fractal iterations. We show that the
log-periodicity of I(q)q^D in the momentum space is related to the
log-periodicity of the quantity g(r)r^{3-D} in the real space, where g(r) is
the pair distribution function. The minima and maxima positions of the
scattering intensity are estimated explicitly by relating them to the pair
distance distribution in the real space. It is shown that the minima and maxima
are damped with increasing polydispersity of the fractal sets; however, they
remain quite pronounced even at sufficiently large values of polydispersity. A
generalized self-similar Vicsek fractal with controllable fractal dimension is
introduced, and its scattering properties are studied to illustrate the above
findings. In contrast with the usual methods, the present analysis allows us to
obtain not only the fractal dimension and the edges of the fractal region, but
also the fractal iteration number, the scaling factor, and the number of
structural units from which the fractal is composed.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure