Abstract

The size of the population of random walkers required to obtain converged estimates in diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) increases dramatically with system size. We illustrate this by comparing ground state energies of small clusters of parahydrogen (up to 48 molecules) computed by DMC and path integral ground state (PIGS) techniques. We contend that the bias associated with a finite population of walkers is the most likely cause of quantitative numerical discrepancies between PIGS and DMC energy estimates reported in the literature, for this few-body Bose system. We discuss the viability of DMC as a general-purpose ground state technique, and argue that PIGS, and even finite temperature methods, enjoy more favorable scaling, and are therefore a superior option for systems of large size.

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