One bottleneck of quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulation of strongly correlated
electron systems lies at the scaling relation of computational complexity with
respect to the system sizes. For generic lattice models of interacting
fermions, the best methodology at hand still scales with βN3 where
β is the inverse temperature and N is the system size. Such scaling
behavior has greatly hampered the accessibility of the universal infrared (IR)
physics of many interesting correlated electron models at (2+1)D, let alone
(3+1)D. To reduce the computational complexity, we develop a new QMC method
with inhomogeneous momentum-space mesh, dubbed elective momentum ultra-size
quantum Monte Carlo (EQMC) method. Instead of treating all fermionic
excitations on an equal footing as in conventional QMC methods, by converting
the fermion determinant into the momentum space, our method focuses on fermion
modes that are directly associated with low-energy (IR) physics in the vicinity
of the so-called hot-spots, while other fermion modes irrelevant for universal
properties are ignored. As shown in the manuscript, for any cutoff-independent
quantities, e.g. scaling exponents, this method can achieve the same level of
accuracy with orders of magnitude increase in computational efficiency. We
demonstrate this method with a model of antiferromagnetic itinerant quantum
critical point, realized via coupling itinerant fermions with a frustrated
transverse-field Ising model on a triangle lattice. The system size of 48×48×32 (L×L×β, almost 3 times of previous
investigations) are comfortably accessed with EQMC. With much larger system
sizes, the scaling exponents are unveiled with unprecedentedly high accuracy,
and this result sheds new light on the open debate about the nature and the
universality class of itinerant quantum critical points.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure