Wave function matching for the quantum many-body problem

ORAL

Abstract

We introduce a new approach for solving quantum many-body systems called wave function matching. Wave function matching transforms the interaction between particles so that the wave functions at short distances match that of an easily computable interaction. This allows for calculations of systems that would otherwise be impossible due to problems such as Monte Carlo sign cancellations. We apply the method to lattice Monte Carlo simulations of light nuclei, medium-mass nuclei, neutron matter, and nuclear matter. We use interactions at next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order in the framework of chiral effective field theory and find good agreement with empirical data. These results are accompanied by new insights on the nuclear interactions that may help to resolve long-standing challenges in accurately reproducing nuclear binding energies, charge radii, and nuclear matter saturation in ab initio calculations.

*Partial support provided by the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-SC0013365 and DE-SC0021152) and the Nuclear Computational Low-Energy Initiative (NUCLEI) SciDAC-4 project (DE-SC0018083). Computational resources provided by the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing e.V. (www.gauss-centre.eu) for computing time on the GCS Supercomputer JUWELS at Julich Supercomputing Centre (JSC) and special GPU time allocated on JURECA-DC, Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility through the INCITE award "Ab-initio nuclear structure and nuclear reactions", TUBITAK ULAKBIM High Performance and Grid Computing Center, and the National Supercomputing Center of Korea.

Publication: arXiv:2210.17488

Presenters

  • Dean J Lee

    • Michigan State University

Authors

  • Dean J Lee

    • Michigan State University