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1.
J Chem Phys ; 160(21)2024 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38828828

ABSTRACT

Drachmann's regularization approach is implemented for floating explicitly correlated Gaussians (fECGs) and molecular systems. Earlier applications of drachmannized relativistic corrections for molecular systems were hindered due to the unknown analytic matrix elements of 1/rix1/rjy-type operators with fECGs. In the present work, one of the 1/r factors is approximated by a linear combination of Gaussians, which results in calculable integrals. The numerical approach is found to be precise and robust over a range of molecular systems and nuclear configurations, and thus, it opens the route toward an automated evaluation of high-precision relativistic corrections over potential energy surfaces of polyatomic systems. Furthermore, the newly developed integration approach makes it possible to construct the matrix representation of the square of the electronic Hamiltonian relevant for energy lower-bound as well as time-dependent computations of molecular systems with a flexible and high-precision fECG basis representation.

2.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 20(11): 4385-4395, 2024 Jun 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38789399

ABSTRACT

Precision physics aims to use atoms and molecules to test and develop the fundamental theory of matter, possibly beyond the Standard Model. Most of the atomic and molecular phenomena are described by the quantum electrodynamics (QED) sector of the Standard Model. Do we have the computational tools, algorithms, and practical equations for the most possible complete computation of atoms and molecules within the QED sector? What is the fundamental equation to start with? Is it still Schrödinger's wave equation for molecular matter, or is there anything beyond that? This paper provides a concise overview of the relativistic QED framework and recent numerical developments targeting precision physics and spectroscopy applications with common features of the robust and successful relativistic quantum chemistry methodology.

3.
J Chem Phys ; 160(20)2024 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38775449

ABSTRACT

This work is a collection of initial calculations and formal considerations within the Salpeter-Sucher exact equal-time relativistic quantum electrodynamics framework. The calculations are carried out as preparation for the computation of pair, retardation, and radiative corrections to the relativistic energy of correlated two-spin-1/2-fermion systems. In this work, particular attention is paid to the retardation and the "one-loop" self-energy corrections, which are known to be among the largest corrections to the correlated relativistic energy. The theoretical development is supplemented with identifying formal connections to the non-relativistic quantum electrodynamics framework, which is based on a correlated but non-relativistic reference, as well as to the "1/Z approach," which is built on a relativistic but independent-particle zeroth order. The two complementary directions currently provide the theoretical framework for light atomic-molecular precision spectroscopy and heavy-atom phenomena. The present theoretical efforts pave the way for relativistic QED corrections to (explicitly) correlated relativistic computations.

4.
ACS Phys Chem Au ; 3(3): 222-240, 2023 May 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37249939

ABSTRACT

Interactions in atomic and molecular systems are dominated by electromagnetic forces and the theoretical framework must be in the quantum regime. The physical theory for the combination of quantum mechanics and electromagnetism, quantum electrodynamics has been "established" by the mid-twentieth century, primarily as a scattering theory. To describe atoms and molecules, it is important to consider bound states. In the nonrelativistic quantum mechanics framework, bound states can be efficiently computed using robust and general methodologies with systematic approximations developed for solving wave equations. With the sight of the development of a computational quantum electrodynamics framework for atomic and molecular matter, the field theoretic Bethe-Salpeter wave equation expressed in space-time coordinates, its exact equal-time variant, and emergence of a relativistic wave equation, is reviewed. A computational framework, with initial applications and future challenges in relation with precision spectroscopy, is also highlighted.

5.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 17(11): 6947-6964, 2021 Nov 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34643380

ABSTRACT

A new scheme is introduced in Multi-Reference (MR) Coupled Cluster (CC) based on the MR Generalized Normal Ordering (MRGNO) and the corresponding MR Generalized Wick Theorem (MRGWT) of Kutzelnigg and Mukherjee. The key element is the identification of a structure in MRGWT generated terms, facilitated by Goldstone diagram techniques. This allows for bundling the many terms of the MRGWT expansion and introduces a hierarchy in the equations that can be harnessed in devising approximations. One- and two-particle interaction vertices are found to be uniformly substituted for their counterpart dressed by density cumulants. This allows for a straightforward rewriting of the ordinary energy expression of CC with interaction dressed (id) one- and two-particle terms and reveals the presence of three- and higher-rank dressed interaction vertices too. Cumulants appearing out of dressed interaction vertices contribute to the amplitude equations and can be interpreted to have an amplitude dressing role. Dressing of one- and two-particle interaction vertices is the most straightforward to implement and does not hinder computational feasibility, provided that the reference function involves strictly limited active space sizes. The Generalized Valence Bond wave function, underlying pilot numerical tests, fulfills this criterion. Results on multiple bond breaking scenarios point to the need of stepping beyond one- and two-particle id. An extremely simple version of incorporating amplitude dressing in addition to one- and two-particle id is seen to cure the potential energy curves remarkably, stimulating further investigations along this line.

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