A comprehensive, self-contained derivation of the one-body density matrices from single-reference excited-state calculation methods using the equation-of-motion formalism
Abstract
In this contribution we review in a rigorous, yet comprehensive fashion the assessment of the one-body reduced density matrices derived from the most used single-reference excited-state calculation methods in the framework of the equation-of-motion formalism. Those methods are separated into two types: those which involve the coupling of a deexcitation operator to a single-excitation transition operator, and those which do not involve such a coupling. The case of many-body auxiliary wave functions for excited states is also addressed. For each of these approaches we were interested in deriving the elements of the one-body transition and difference density matrices, and to highlight their particular structure. This has been accomplished by applying a decomposition of integrals involving one-determinant quantum electronic states on which two or three pairs of second quantization operators can act. Such a decomposition has been done according to a corollary to Wick's theorem, which is brought in a comprehensive and detailed manner. A comment is also given about the consequences of using the equation-of-motion formulation in this context, and the two types of excited-state calculation methods (with and without coupling excitations to deexcitations) are finally compared from the point of view of the structure of their transition and difference density matrices.
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