Tracing the Successes and Failures of the HF-GKBA in Non-equilibrium Systems
ORAL
Abstract
The Kadanoff-Baym equations (KBE) are a formally exact set of equations (provided that the exact self-energy is known) for the propagation of non-equilibrium Green's functions (NEGF). However, KBE suffers from poor numerical scaling with the system size and the simulation time. Practical calculations thus often resort to the approximate Hartree-Fock generalized Kadanoff-Baym ansatz (HF-GKBA). However, comparison of HF-GKBA with exact or KBE results shows good agreement only for relatively short times, but such direct comparison has been limited to a limited set of problems: simple two band models with onsite interactions. I will show that the highly restricted models are partly to blame for the poor performance of HF-GKBA. We study several classes of non-equilibrium systems with long-range interactions and various forms of non-equilibrium state preparation. Further, we will demonstrate under which conditions the non-equilibrium dynamics is amenable to efficient numerical approximations that can further reduce the computational cost. This work outlines the reliability of HF-GKBA for studying realistic non-equilibrium systems fully from first-principles.
*This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research and Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) program under Award Number DE-SC0022198 and was supported by NSF award number DMR-1906325
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Presenters
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Cian C Reeves
- University of California, Santa Barbara