English

Reverse engineering in many-body quantum physics: What many-body system corresponds to an effective single-particle equation?

Other Condensed Matter 2009-11-13 v2 Chemical Physics

Abstract

The mapping, exact or approximate, of a many-body problem onto an effective single-body problem is one of the most widely used conceptual and computational tools of physics. Here, we propose and investigate the inverse map of effective approximate single-particle equations onto the corresponding many-particle system. This approach allows us to understand which interacting system a given single-particle approximation is actually describing, and how far this is from the original physical many-body system. We illustrate the resulting reverse engineering process by means of the Kohn-Sham equations of density-functional theory. In this application, our procedure sheds light on the non-locality of the density-potential mapping of DFT, and on the self-interaction error inherent in approximate density functionals.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.0586,
  title  = {Reverse engineering in many-body quantum physics: What many-body system corresponds to an effective single-particle equation?},
  author = {J. P. Coe and K. Capelle and I. D'Amico},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.0586},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

4 pages, 2 figures. Accepted by PRA

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:16:25.570Z