from Part IV - Stochastic methods
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2016
… a general method, suitable for electronic computing machines, of calculating the properties of any substance which may be considered as composed of interacting individual molecules.
N. Metropolis et al., 1953Summary
Quantum Monte Carlo methods have been very useful in providing exact results, or, at least, exact constraints on properties of electronic systems, in particular for the homogeneous electron gas. The results are, in many cases, more accurate than those from other quantum many-body methods, and provide unique capabilities and insights. In this chapter we introduce the general properties of stochastic methods and motivate their use on the quantum many-body problem. In particular, we discuss Markov chains and the computation of error estimates.
The methods that we introduce in the next four chapters are quite different from those in Parts II and III: stochastic or quantum Monte Carlo methods. In stochastic methods, instead of solving deterministically for properties of the quantum many-body system, one sets up a random walk that samples for the properties. Historically the most important role of QMC for the electronic structure field has been to provide input into the other methods, most notably the QMC calculation of the HEG [109], used for the exchange– correlation functional in DFT. A second important role has been as benchmarks for other methods such asGW. There are systems for which QMC is uniquely suited, for example the Wigner transition in the low-density electron gas, see Sec. 3.1. In this chapter we introduce general properties of simulations, in particular Markov chains, and error estimates. In the following chapters we will apply this theory to three general classes of quantum Monte Carlo algorithms, namely variational (Ch. 23), projector (Ch. 24), and path-integral Monte Carlo (Ch. 25); Ch. 18 already introduced the QMC calculation of the impurity Green's function used in the dynamical mean-field method.We note that there are a variety of other QMC methods not covered in this book.
Simulations
First let us define what we mean by a simulation, since the word has other meanings in applied science. The dimensionality of phase space (i.e., the Hilbert space for a quantum system) is large or infinite. Even a classical system requires the positions and momenta of all particles, and, hence, the phase space for N classical particles has dimensionality 6N.
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