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Regularity and Approximability of Electronic Wave Functions [electronic resource] / by Harry Yserentant.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Mathematics ; 2000Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010Description: VIII, 188 p. 6 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783642122484
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 515.353 23
LOC classification:
  • QA370-380
Online resources:
Contents:
and Outline -- Fourier Analysis -- The Basics of Quantum Mechanics -- The Electronic Schrödinger Equation -- Spectrum and Exponential Decay -- Existence and Decay of Mixed Derivatives -- Eigenfunction Expansions -- Convergence Rates and Complexity Bounds -- The Radial-Angular Decomposition.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The electronic Schrödinger equation describes the motion of N-electrons under Coulomb interaction forces in a field of clamped nuclei. The solutions of this equation, the electronic wave functions, depend on 3N variables, with three spatial dimensions for each electron. Approximating these solutions is thus inordinately challenging, and it is generally believed that a reduction to simplified models, such as those of the Hartree-Fock method or density functional theory, is the only tenable approach. This book seeks to show readers that this conventional wisdom need not be ironclad: the regularity of the solutions, which increases with the number of electrons, the decay behavior of their mixed derivatives, and the antisymmetry enforced by the Pauli principle contribute properties that allow these functions to be approximated with an order of complexity which comes arbitrarily close to that for a system of one or two electrons. The text is accessible to a mathematical audience at the beginning graduate level as well as to physicists and theoretical chemists with a comparable mathematical background and requires no deeper knowledge of the theory of partial differential equations, functional analysis, or quantum theory.
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and Outline -- Fourier Analysis -- The Basics of Quantum Mechanics -- The Electronic Schrödinger Equation -- Spectrum and Exponential Decay -- Existence and Decay of Mixed Derivatives -- Eigenfunction Expansions -- Convergence Rates and Complexity Bounds -- The Radial-Angular Decomposition.

The electronic Schrödinger equation describes the motion of N-electrons under Coulomb interaction forces in a field of clamped nuclei. The solutions of this equation, the electronic wave functions, depend on 3N variables, with three spatial dimensions for each electron. Approximating these solutions is thus inordinately challenging, and it is generally believed that a reduction to simplified models, such as those of the Hartree-Fock method or density functional theory, is the only tenable approach. This book seeks to show readers that this conventional wisdom need not be ironclad: the regularity of the solutions, which increases with the number of electrons, the decay behavior of their mixed derivatives, and the antisymmetry enforced by the Pauli principle contribute properties that allow these functions to be approximated with an order of complexity which comes arbitrarily close to that for a system of one or two electrons. The text is accessible to a mathematical audience at the beginning graduate level as well as to physicists and theoretical chemists with a comparable mathematical background and requires no deeper knowledge of the theory of partial differential equations, functional analysis, or quantum theory.

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