Reaching the continuum limit in finite-temperature ab initio field-theory computations in many-fermion systems
Abstract
Finite-temperature, grand-canonical computations based on field theory are widely applied in areas including condensed matter physics, ultracold atomic gas systems, and lattice gauge theory. However, these calculations have computational costs scaling as Ns3 with the size of the lattice or basis set, Ns. We report a new approach based on systematically controllable low-rank factorization which reduces the scaling of such computations to Ns Ne2, where Ne is the average number of fermions in the system. In any realistic calculations aiming to describe the continuum limit, Ns/Ne is large and needs to be extrapolated effectively to infinity for convergence. The method thus fundamentally changes the prospect for finite-temperature many-body computations in correlated fermion systems. Its application, in combination with frameworks to control the sign or phase problem as needed, will provide a powerful tool in ab initio quantum chemistry and correlated electron materials. We demonstrate the method by computing exact properties of the two-dimensional Fermi gas with zero-range attractive interaction, as a function of temperature in both the normal and superfluid states.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.