Abstract

Due to Landau quantization, the conductance of two-dimensional electrons exposed to a perpendicular magnetic field exhibits oscillations that generate a fan of linear trajectories when plotted in the parameter space spanned by density and field. This fan looks identical, irrespective of the dispersion and field dependence of the Landau level energy. This is no surprise because the position of conductance minima depends solely on the level degeneracy that is linear in flux. The fractal energy spectrum that emerges within each Landau band when electrons are also exposed to a two-dimensional superlattice potential produces numerous additional oscillations, but they also create just linear fans for identical reasons. Here, we report conductance oscillations of graphene electrons exposed to a moiré potential that defy this general rule and form nonlinear trajectories in the density-field plane. We attribute this anomalous behavior to the simultaneous occupation of multiple minibands and magnetic breakdown-induced open orbits.

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