84 research outputs found
In-Medium Similarity Renormalization Group for Nuclei
We present a new ab-initio method that uses similarity renormalization group
(SRG) techniques to continuously diagonalize nuclear many-body Hamiltonians. In
contrast with applications of the SRG to two- and three-nucleon interactions in
free space, we perform the SRG evolution "in medium" directly in the -body
system of interest. The in-medium approach has the advantage that one can
approximately evolve -body operators using only two-body machinery
based on normal-ordering techniques. The method is nonperturbative and can be
tailored to problems ranging from the diagonalization of closed-shell nuclei to
the construction of effective valence shell-model Hamiltonians and operators.
We present first results for the ground-state energies of He, O and
Ca, which have accuracies comparable to coupled-cluster calculations.Comment: 4pages, 4 figures, to be published in PR
High-gradient operators in the N-vector model
It has been shown by several authors that a certain class of composite
operators with many fields and gradients endangers the stability of nontrivial
fixed points in 2+eps expansions for various models. This problem is so far
unresolved. We investigate it in the N-vector model in an 1/N-expansion. By
establishing an asymptotic naive addition law for anomalous dimensions we
demonstrate that the first orders in the 2+eps expansion can lead to erroneous
interpretations for high--gradient operators. While this makes us cautious
against over--interpreting such expansions (either 2+eps or 1/N), the stability
problem in the N-vector model persists also in first order in 1/N below three
dimensions.Comment: 18 pages, 4 Postscript figures; revised version contains two
additional references and "Note added in proof
Flow equation solution for the weak to strong-coupling crossover in the sine-Gordon model
A continuous sequence of infinitesimal unitary transformations, combined with
an operator product expansion for vertex operators, is used to diagonalize the
quantum sine-Gordon model for 2 pi < beta^2 < infinity. The leading order of
this approximation already gives very accurate results for the single-particle
gap in the strong-coupling phase. This approach can be understood as an
extension of perturbative scaling theory since it links weak to strong-coupling
behavior in a systematic expansion. The approach should also be useful for
other strong-coupling problems that can be formulated in terms of vertex
operators.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, minor changes (typo in Eq. (3) corrected,
references added), published versio
Block Diagonalization using SRG Flow Equations
By choosing appropriate generators for the Similarity Renormalization Group
(SRG) flow equations, different patterns of decoupling in a Hamiltonian can be
achieved. Sharp and smooth block-diagonal forms of phase-shift equivalent
nucleon-nucleon potentials in momentum space are generated as examples and
compared to analogous low-momentum interactions ("v_lowk").Comment: 4 pages, 9 figures (pdfLaTeX
Local Projections of Low-Momentum Potentials
Nuclear interactions evolved via renormalization group methods to lower
resolution become increasingly non-local (off-diagonal in coordinate space) as
they are softened. This inhibits both the development of intuition about the
interactions and their use with some methods for solving the quantum many-body
problem. By applying "local projections", a softened interaction can be reduced
to a local effective interaction plus a non-local residual interaction. At the
two-body level, a local projection after similarity renormalization group (SRG)
evolution manifests the elimination of short-range repulsive cores and the flow
toward universal low-momentum interactions. The SRG residual interaction is
found to be relatively weak at low energy, which motivates a perturbative
treatment
In-Medium Similarity Renormalization Group with Chiral Two- Plus Three-Nucleon Interactions
We use the recently proposed In-Medium Similarity Renormalization Group
(IM-SRG) to carry out a systematic study of closed-shell nuclei up to
\nuc{Ni}{56}, based on chiral two- plus three-nucleon interactions. We
analyze the capabilities of the IM-SRG by comparing our results for the
ground-state energy to Coupled Cluster calculations, as well as to quasi-exact
results from the Importance-Truncated No-Core Shell Model. Using chiral two-
plus three-nucleon Hamiltonians whose resolution scales are lowered by
free-space SRG evolution, we obtain good agreement with experimental binding
energies in \nuc{He}{4} and the closed-shell oxygen isotopes, while the
calcium and nickel isotopes are somewhat overbound.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Symmetric Anderson impurity model with a narrow band
The single channel Anderson impurity model is a standard model for the
description of magnetic impurities in metallic systems. Usually, the bandwidth
represents the largest energy scale of the problem. In this paper, we analyze
the limit of a narrow band, which is relevant for the Mott-Hubbard transition
in infinite dimensions. For the symmetric model we discuss two different
effects: i) The impurity contribution to the density of states at the Fermi
surface always turns out to be negative in such systems. This leads to a new
crossover in the thermodynamic quantities that we investigate using the
numerical renormalization group. ii) Using the Lanczos method, we calculate the
impurity spectral function and demonstrate the breakdown of the skeleton
expansion on an intermediate energy scale. Luttinger's theorem, as an example
of the local Fermi liquid property of the model, is shown to still be valid.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 2 eps figures included, final versio
Flow equations for Hamiltonians: Contrasting different approaches by using a numerically solvable model
To contrast different generators for flow equations for Hamiltonians and to
discuss the dependence of physical quantities on unitarily equivalent, but
effectively different initial Hamiltonians, a numerically solvable model is
considered which is structurally similar to impurity models. By this we discuss
the question of optimization for the first time. A general truncation scheme is
established that produces good results for the Hamiltonian flow as well as for
the operator flow. Nevertheless, it is also pointed out that a systematic and
feasible scheme for the operator flow on the operator level is missing. For
this, an explicit analysis of the operator flow is given for the first time. We
observe that truncation of the series of the observable flow after the linear
or bilinear terms does not yield satisfactory results for the entire parameter
regime as - especially close to resonances - even high orders of the exact
series expansion carry considerable weight.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figure
Decoupling in the Similarity Renormalization Group for Nucleon-Nucleon Forces
Decoupling via the Similarity Renormalization Group (SRG) of low-energy
nuclear physics from high-energy details of the nucleon-nucleon interaction is
examined for two-body observables and few-body binding energies. The universal
nature of this decoupling is illustrated and errors from suppressing
high-momentum modes above the decoupling scale are shown to be perturbatively
small.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figure
Assisted hopping and interaction effects in impurity models
We study, using Numerical Renormalization Group methods, the generalization
of the Anderson impurity model where the hopping depends on the filling of the
impurity. We show that the model, for sufficiently large values of the assisted
hopping term, shows a regime where local pairing correlations are enhanced.
These correlations involve pairs fluctuating between on site and nearest
neighbor positions
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