Hofstadter's butterfly in moire superlattices: A fractal quantum Hall effect
C. R. Dean, L. Wang, P. Maher, C. Forsythe, F. Ghahari, Y. Gao, J., Katoch, M. Ishigami, P. Moon, M. Koshino, T. Taniguchi, K. Watanabe, K. L., Shepard, J. Hone, and P. Kim

TL;DR
This paper reports the experimental observation of Hofstadter's butterfly fractal energy spectrum in moire superlattices of bilayer graphene on hexagonal boron nitride, revealing recursive quantum Hall features and topological quantum numbers.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the first clear experimental realization of Hofstadter's butterfly in a tunable 2D material system using moire superlattices.
Findings
Observation of fractal quantum Hall features
Confirmation of topological quantum numbers
Evidence of recursive energy spectrum structure
Abstract
Electrons moving through a spatially periodic lattice potential develop a quantized energy spectrum consisting of discrete Bloch bands. In two dimensions, electrons moving through a magnetic field also develop a quantized energy spectrum, consisting of highly degenerate Landau energy levels. In 1976 Douglas Hofstadter theoretically considered the intersection of these two problems and discovered that 2D electrons subjected to both a magnetic field and a periodic electrostatic potential exhibit a self-similar recursive energy spectrum. Known as Hofstadter's butterfly, this complex spectrum results from a delicate interplay between the characteristic lengths associated with the two quantizing fields, and represents one of the first quantum fractals discovered in physics. In the decades since, experimental attempts to study this effect have been limited by difficulties in reconciling the…
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