Abstract
The reduced density matrix functional theory (RDMFT) is a remarkable tool for studying properties of ground states of strongly interacting quantum many body systems. As it gives access to the one-particle reduced density matrix of the ground state, it provides a perfectly tailored approach to studying the Bose–Einstein condensation (BEC) or systems of strongly correlated electrons. In particular, for homogeneous BECs as well as for the Bose–Hubbard dimer it has been recently shown that the relevant density functional exhibits a repulsive gradient (called the Bose–Einstein condensation force) which diverges when the fraction of non-condensed bosons tends to zero. In this paper, we show that the existence of the Bose–Einstein condensation force is completely universal for any type of pair-interaction and also in the non-homogeneous gases. To this end, we construct a universal family of variational trial states which allows us to suitably approximate the relevant density functional in a finite region around the set of the completely condensed states. We also show the existence of an analogous repulsive gradient in the fermionic RDMFT for the N-fermion singlet sector in the vicinity of the set of the Hartree–Fock states. Finally, we show that our approximate functional may perform well in electron transfer calculations involving low numbers of electrons. This is demonstrated numerically in the Fermi–Hubbard model in the strongly correlated limit where some other approximate functionals are known to fail.
Highlights
The Bose–Einstein condensate (BEC) has been theoretically predicted by Bose and Einstein [1, 2] in 1924
We show that the existence of the Bose–Einstein condensation force is completely universal for any type of pair-interaction and in the non-homogeneous gases
The upper bounds depend on the depletion parameter which is the number of non-condensed bosons, N − NBEC, or the number of fermions which do not occupy the N/2 highest occupied natural orbitals, N − NHF
Summary
Keywords: density matrix methods, ab initio calculations, density functional theory development, Bose–Einstein condensates, electronic structure Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
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