Reduced basis emulation of pairing in finite systems
Virgil V. Baran, Denis R. Nichita

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that reduced basis methods can efficiently and accurately emulate pairing interactions in finite many-body systems, significantly speeding up computations while maintaining high accuracy.
Contribution
The work introduces a reduced basis approach for modeling pairing in finite systems, enabling fast emulation of complex many-body phenomena with high precision.
Findings
RBM accurately captures pairing cross-over in small grains
RBM models topological phase transition in Richardson-Kitaev chain
RBM efficiently describes charge stability in hybrid devices
Abstract
In recent years, reduced basis methods (RBMs) have been adapted to the many-body eigenvalue problem and they have been used, largely in nuclear physics, as fast emulators able to bypass expensive direct computations while still providing highly accurate results. This work is meant to show that the RBM is an efficient and accurate emulator for the strong correlations induced by the pairing interaction in a variety of finite systems like ultrasmall superconducting grains, interacting topological superfluids and mesoscopic hybrid superconductor-semiconductor devices, all of which require an expensive, beyond-mean-field, particle-number conserving description. These systems are modelled by the number-conserving Richardson pairing Hamiltonian and its appropriate generalizations. Their ground state is solved for exactly using the Density Matrix Renormalization Group. The reduced basis is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Magnetic properties of thin films · Scientific Research and Discoveries
