2,948 research outputs found
Comment on "Equivalence of the variational matrix product method and the density matrix renormalization group applied to spin chains"
Dukelsky, Mart\'in-Delgado, Nishino and Sierra (Europhys. Lett., 43, 457
(1998) - hereafter referred to as DMNS) investigated the matrix product method
(MPM), comparing it with the infinite-size density matrix renormalization group
(DMRG). For equivalent basis size, the MPM produces an improved variational
energy over that produced by DMRG and, unlike DMRG, produces a
translationally-invariant wavefunction. The DMRG results presented were
significantly worse than the MPM, caused by a shallow bound state appearing at
the join of the two DMRG blocks. They also suggested that the DMRG results can
be improved by using an alternate superblock construction for
the last few steps of the calculation. In this comment, we show that the DMRG
results presented by DMNS are in error and the artificial bound state produced
by the standard superblock configuration is very small even for states
kept. In addition, we calculate explicitly the energy and wavefunction for the
superblock structure and verify that the energy coincides
with that of the MPM, as conjectured by S. Ostlund and S. Rommer (Phys. Rev.
Lett., 75, 3537 (1995)).Comment: 2 pages, 1 eps figure included. eps.cls include
The Non-Abelian Density Matrix Renormalization Group Algorithm
We describe here the extension of the density matrix renormalization group
algorithm to the case where Hamiltonian has a non-Abelian global symmetry
group. The block states transform as irreducible representations of the
non-Abelian group. Since the representations are multi-dimensional, a single
block state in the new representation corresponds to multiple states of the
original density matrix renormalization group basis. We demonstrate the
usefulness of the construction via the one-dimensional Hubbard model as the
symmetry group is enlarged from , up to .Comment: Revised version discusses the Hubbard model with SO(4) symmetr
Particle number conservation in quantum many-body simulations with matrix product operators
Incorporating conservation laws explicitly into matrix product states (MPS)
has proven to make numerical simulations of quantum many-body systems much less
resources consuming. We will discuss here, to what extent this concept can be
used in simulation where the dynamically evolving entities are matrix product
operators (MPO). Quite counter-intuitively the expectation of gaining in speed
by sacrificing information about all but a single symmetry sector is not in all
cases fulfilled. It turns out that in this case often the entanglement imposed
by the global constraint of fixed particle number is the limiting factor.Comment: minor changes, 18 pages, 5 figure
Generic Construction of Efficient Matrix Product Operators
Matrix Product Operators (MPOs) are at the heart of the second-generation
Density Matrix Renormalisation Group (DMRG) algorithm formulated in Matrix
Product State language. We first summarise the widely known facts on MPO
arithmetic and representations of single-site operators. Second, we introduce
three compression methods (Rescaled SVD, Deparallelisation and Delinearisation)
for MPOs and show that it is possible to construct efficient representations of
arbitrary operators using MPO arithmetic and compression. As examples, we
construct powers of a short-ranged spin-chain Hamiltonian, a complicated
Hamiltonian of a two-dimensional system and, as proof of principle, the
long-range four-body Hamiltonian from quantum chemistry.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
Spin-1 Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chain with exchange and single-ion anisotropies
Using density matrix renormalization group calculations, ground state
properties of the spin-1 Heisenberg chain with exchange and single-ion
anisotropies in an external field are studied. Our findings confirm and refine
recent results by Sengupta and Batista, Physical Review Letters 99, 217205
(2007) (2007), on the same model applying Monte Carlo techniques. In
particular, we present evidence for two types of biconical (or supersolid) and
for two types of spin-flop (or superfluid) structures. Basic features of the
quantum phase diagram may be interpreted qualitatively in the framework of
classical spin models.Comment: Ref. 1 corrected (also in the abstract
Biorthonormal Matrix-Product-State Analysis for Non-Hermitian Transfer-Matrix Renormalization-Group in the Thermodynamic Limit
We give a thorough Biorthonormal Matrix-Product-State (BMPS) analysis of the
Transfer-Matrix Renormalization-Group (TMRG) for non-Hermitian matrices in the
thermodynamic limit. The BMPS is built on a dual series of reduced
biorthonormal bases for the left and right Perron states of a non-Hermitian
matrix. We propose two alternative infinite-size Biorthonormal TMRG (iBTMRG)
algorithms and compare their numerical performance in both finite and infinite
systems. We show that both iBTMRGs produce a dual infinite-BMPS (iBMPS) which
are translationally invariant in the thermodynamic limit. We also develop an
efficient wave function transformation of the iBTMRG, an analogy of McCulloch
in the infinite-DMRG [arXiv:0804.2509 (2008)], to predict the wave function as
the lattice size is increased. The resulting iBMPS allows for probing bulk
properties of the system in the thermodynamic limit without boundary effects
and allows for reducing the computational cost to be independent of the lattice
size, which are illustrated by calculating the magnetization as a function of
the temperature and the critical spin-spin correlation in the thermodynamic
limit for a 2D classical Ising model.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
- …