Many-Body Physics in Small Systems: Observing the Onset and Saturation of Correlation in Linear Atomic Chains
Emily Townsend, Tom\'a\v{s} Neuman, Alex Debrecht, Javier Aizpurua,, Garnett W. Bryant

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Single-Particle Excitation Content (SPEC), a new measure derived from exact diagonalization of small atomic chains, revealing how electron correlations develop and saturate as interaction strength varies.
Contribution
The study presents the SPEC measure and demonstrates its effectiveness in identifying five distinct regimes of electron correlation in small 1-D atomic chains, providing new insights into many-body physics.
Findings
SPEC reveals five regimes of electron correlation.
SPEC distinguishes non-interacting and weakly interacting states.
SPEC guides intuition for larger systems.
Abstract
The exact study of small systems can guide us toward measures for extracting information about many-body physics as we move to more complex systems capable of quantum information processing or quantum analog simulation. We use exact diagonalization to study many electrons in short 1-D atom chains represented by long-range extended Hubbard-like models. We introduce a novel measure, the Single-Particle Excitation Content (SPEC) of an eigenstate and show that the dependence of SPEC on state number reveals the nature of the ground state, and the onset and saturation of correlation between the electrons as Coulomb interaction strength increases. We use this SPEC behavior to identify five regimes as interaction is increased: a non-interacting single-particle regime, a regime of perturbative Coulomb interaction in which the SPEC is a nearly universal function of state number, the onset and…
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