251 research outputs found
Reduced density matrices, their spectral resolutions, and the Kimball-Overhauser approach
Recently, it has been shown, that the pair density of the homogeneous
electron gas can be parametrized in terms of 2-body wave functions (geminals),
which are scattering solutions of an effective 2-body Schr\"odinger equation.
For the corresponding scattering phase shifts, new sum rules are reported in
this paper. These sum rules describe not only the normalization of the pair
density (similar to the Friedel sum rule of solid state theory), but also the
contraction of the 2-body reduced density matrix. This allows one to calculate
also the momentum distribution, provided that the geminals are known from an
appropriate screening of the Coulomb repulsion. An analysis is presented
leading from the definitions and (contraction and spectral) properties of
reduced density matrices to the Kimball-Overhauser approach and its
generalizations. Thereby cumulants are used. Their size-extensivity is related
to the thermodynamic limit.Comment: 15 pages, conference contributio
The 2-matrix of the spin-polarized electron gas: contraction sum rules and spectral resolutions
The spin-polarized homogeneous electron gas with densities
and for electrons with spin `up' () and spin `down'
(), respectively, is systematically analyzed with respect to its
lowest-order reduced densities and density matrices and their mutual relations.
The three 2-body reduced density matrices ,
, are 4-point functions for electron
pairs with spins , , and antiparallel,
respectively. From them, three functions ,
, , depending on only two variables,
are derived. These functions contain not only the pair densities but also the
1-body reduced density matrices. The contraction properties of the 2-body
reduced density matrices lead to three sum rules to be obeyed by the three key
functions , . These contraction sum rules contain corresponding
normalization sum rules as special cases. The momentum distributions
and , following from and
by Fourier transform, are correctly normalized through
. In addition to the non-negativity conditions
[these quantities are probabilities], it holds
and due to the Pauli principle and
due to the Coulomb repulsion. Recent parametrizations of the pair densities of
the spin-unpolarized homogeneous electron gas in terms of 2-body wave functions
(geminals) and corresponding occupancies are generalized (i) to the
spin-polarized case and (ii) to the 2-body reduced density matrix giving thus
its spectral resolutions.Comment: 32 pages, 4 figure
Methods for electronic-structure calculations - an overview from a reduced-density-matrix point of view
The methods of quantum chemistry and solid state theory to solve the
many-body problem are reviewed. We start with the definitions of reduced
density matrices, their properties (contraction sum rules, spectral
resolutions, cumulant expansion, -representability), and their determining
equations (contracted Schr\"odinger equations) and we summarize recent
extensions and generalizations of the traditional quantum chemical methods, of
the density functional theory, and of the quasi-particle theory: from finite to
extended systems (incremental method), from density to density matrix (density
matrix functional theory), from weak to strong correlation (dynamical mean
field theory), from homogeneous (Kimball-Overhauser approach) to inhomogeneous
and finite systems. Measures of the correlation strength are discussed. The
cumulant two-body reduced density matrix proves to be a key quantity. Its
spectral resolution contains geminals, being possibly the solutions of an
approximate effective two-body equation, and the idea is sketched of how its
contraction sum rule can be used for a variational treatment.Comment: 27 pages, conference contributio
The self-energy of the uniform electron gas in the second order of exchange
The on-shell self-energy of the homogeneous electron gas in second order of
exchange, , is given by a certain integral. This integral is treated here in a
similar way as Onsager, Mittag, and Stephen [Ann. Physik (Leipzig) {\bf 18}, 71
(1966)] have obtained their famous analytical expression (in atomic units) for the correlation energy in
second order of exchange. Here it is shown that the result for the
corresponding on-shell self-energy is . The
off-shell self-energy correctly yields (the potential component of ) through the Galitskii-Migdal
formula. The quantities and appear in the
high-density limit of the Hugenholtz-van Hove (Luttinger-Ward) theorem.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
The on-shell self-energy of the uniform electron gas in its weak-correlation limit
The ring-diagram partial summation (or RPA) for the ground-state energy of
the uniform electron gas (with the density parameter ) in its
weak-correlation limit is revisited. It is studied, which treatment
of the self-energy is in agreement with the Hugenholtz-van
Hove (Luttinger-Ward) theorem and which is
not. The correlation part of the lhs h as the RPA asymptotics [in atomic units]. The use of renormalized RPA diagrams for the rhs
yields the similar expression with the sum rule
resulting from three sum rules for the components of and . This
includes in the second order of exchange the sum rule [P. Ziesche, Ann. Phys. (Leipzig), 2006].Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
New sum rules relating the 1-body momentum distribution of the homogeneous electron gas to the Overhauser 2-body wave functions of its pair density
The recently derived sum rules for the scattering phase shifts of the
Overhauser geminals (being 2-body-wave functions which parametrize the pair
density together with an appropriately chosen occupancy) are generalized to
integral equations which allow in principle to calculate the momentum
distribution, supposed the phase sifts of the Overhauser geminals are known
from an effective parity-dependent interaction potential (screened Coulomb
repulsion).Comment: 10 page
New measure of electron correlation
We propose to quantify the "correlation" inherent in a many-electron (or
many-fermion) wavefunction by comparing it to the unique uncorrelated state
that has the same single-particle density operator as it does.Comment: Final version to appear in PR
Screened Exchange Corrections to the Random Phase Approximation from Many-Body Perturbation Theory
The random phase approximation (RPA) systematically overestimates the magnitude of the correlation energy and generally underestimates cohesive energies. This originates in part from the complete lack of exchange terms that would otherwise cancel Pauli exclusion principle violating (EPV) contributions. The uncanceled EPV contributions also manifest themselves in form of an unphysical negative pair density of spin parallel electrons close to electron-electron coalescence. We follow considerations of many-body perturbation theory to propose an exchange correction that corrects the largest set of EPV contributions, while having the lowest possible computational complexity. The proposed method exchanges adjacent particle/hole pairs in the RPA diagrams, considerably improving the pair density of spin-parallel electrons close to coalescence in the uniform electron gas (UEG). The accuracy of the correlation energy is comparable to other variants of second-order screened exchange (SOSEX) corrections although it is slightly more accurate for the spin-polarized UEG. Its computational complexity scales as O(N-5) or O(N-4) in orbital space or real space, respectively. Its memory requirement scales as O(N-2)
Quantum Monte Carlo Algorithm Based on Two-Body Density Functional Theory for Fermionic Many-Body Systems: Application to 3He
We construct a quantum Monte Carlo algorithm for interacting fermions using
the two-body density as the fundamental quantity. The central idea is mapping
the interacting fermionic system onto an auxiliary system of interacting
bosons. The correction term is approximated using correlated wave functions for
the interacting system, resulting in an effective potential that represents the
nodal surface. We calculate the properties of 3He and find good agreement with
experiment and with other theoretical work. In particular, our results for the
total energy agree well with other calculations where the same approximations
were implemented but the standard quantum Monte Carlo algorithm was usedComment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
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