Nearsightedness of Electronic Matter in One Dimension
E. Prodan

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the nearsightedness of electronic matter in one-dimensional systems, providing explicit estimates of the nearsightedness range for metals and insulators, and demonstrating limited local density changes despite significant potential modifications.
Contribution
It offers a detailed quantitative analysis of NEM in 1D systems, including explicit estimates of the nearsightedness range under various potential changes.
Findings
NEM persists even with drastic potential changes.
Explicit estimates of nearsightedness range are provided.
Local electronic properties are limited by the unperturbed system parameters.
Abstract
The concept of nearsightedeness of electronic matter (NEM) was introduced by W. Kohn in 1996 as the physical principal underlining Yang's electronic structure alghoritm of divide and conquer. It describes the fact that, for fixed chemical potential, local electronic properties at a point , like the density , depend significantly on the external potential only at nearby points. Changes of that potential, {\it no matter how large}, beyond a distance , have {\it limited} effects on local electronic properties, which tend to zero as function of . This remains true even if the changes in the external potential completely surrounds the point . NEM can be quantitatively characterized by the nearsightedness range, , defined as the smallest distance from , beyond which {\it any} change of the external…
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