A real-time extension of density matrix embedding theory for non-equilibrium electron dynamics
Joshua S. Kretchmer, Garnet Kin-Lic Chan

TL;DR
This paper introduces real-time density matrix embedding theory (DMET), a novel quantum embedding approach for simulating non-equilibrium electron dynamics in strongly correlated systems, demonstrating improved accuracy over mean-field methods.
Contribution
The paper develops a real-time extension of DMET for non-equilibrium dynamics, focusing on a single impurity and deriving equations of motion via the variational principle.
Findings
Real-time DMET outperforms TDHF in the Kondo regime of SIAM.
Real-time DMET converges to the exact solution better than mean-field methods.
Comparison shows real-time DMET is efficient for strongly correlated non-equilibrium systems.
Abstract
We introduce real-time density matrix embedding theory (DMET), a dynamical quantum embedding theory for computing non-equilibrium electron dynamics in strongly correlated systems. As in the previously developed static DMET, real-time DMET partitions the system into an impurity corresponding to the region of interest coupled to the surrounding environment, which is efficiently represented by a quantum bath of the same size as the impurity. In this work, we focus on a single-impurity time-dependent theory as a first step towards a full multi-impurity theory. The equations of motion of the coupled impurity and bath embedding problem in real-time DMET are then derived using the time-dependent variational principle. The accuracy of real-time DMET is compared to that of time-dependent complete active space self-consistent field (TD-CASSCF) theory and time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) theory…
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