4.6 Article

Nonlocal correlation effects in fermionic many-body systems: Overcoming the noncausality problem

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 105, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.105.245115

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. European Research Council [CorrelMat-617196]
  2. IDRIS/GENCI [t2020091393]

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Motivated by the physics of quasi-two-dimensional fermionic systems, many-body computational methods that include both local and nonlocal electronic correlations are rapidly evolving. Methods may be hindered by the emergence of noncausal features, but the presented approach extends local many-body techniques to nonlocal correlations while preserving causality.
Motivated by the intriguing physics of quasi-two-dimensional fermionic systems, such as high-temperature superconducting oxides, layered transition metal chalcogenides, or surface or interface systems, the development of many-body computational methods geared at including both local and nonlocal electronic correlations has become a rapidly evolving field. It has been realized, however, that the success of such methods can be hampered by the emergence of noncausal features in the effective or observable quantities involved. Here, we present an approach wherein local many-body techniques such as dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) are extended to nonlocal correlations and interactions, which preserves causality and has a physically intuitive interpretation. Our strategy has implications for the general class of DMFT-inspired many-body methods and can be adapted to cluster, dual boson, or dual fermion techniques with minimal effort.

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