The electrons that power our society flow left and right through the circuitry in our electronics, back and forth along the transmission lines that make up our power grid, and up and down to light up every floor of every building. But the electrons in newly discovered “moiré crystals” move in much stranger ways. They can move left and right, back and forth, or up and down in our three-dimensional world, but these electrons also act as if they can teleport in and out of a mysterious fourth dimension of space that is perpendicular to our perceivable reality. Physicists have found that this strange, newly discovered quantum behavior has nothing to do with the electrons themselves and everything to do with the strange material environment in which they live.
The electrons in moiré crystals leap into a fourth dimension through a process called “quantum tunneling.” While a soccer ball sitting at the bottom of a hill will stay put until someone retrieves it, a quantum particle in a valley can jump out all on its own. Quantum tunneling may seem magical to us, but it is quite commonplace in the microscopic quantum world, on the length scales of atoms. Quantum tunneling is also important on larger length scales, particularly in large superconducting circuits that underlie an emerging landscape of quantum technology, as recognized by the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics.
However, quantum tunneling in moiré crystals is different, in that once an electron tunnels, physicists have now measured that it acts as if it had tunneled into a completely different world and come back again, as if it had been transported through a fourth “synthetic” dimension.









