The Grassmann
manifold, gauge, and quantum chemistry
Lin Lin, UC Berkeley
Abstract:
The Grassmann manifold Gr(m,n) is the set of n-dimensional
subspaces in R^m
(assuming m>n), and is used in many science and engineering
applications. A point in Gr(m,n) can be represented by an
orthogonal matrix of size m by n, multiplied by another arbitrary
orthogonal matrix of size n by n. In quantum chemistry and in
particular the widely used density functional theory (DFT),
this arbitrary orthogonal matrix is referred to as the
gauge. Physical
quantities such as energies and electron densities should be
independent of the
gauge choice. In this talk, I am going to discuss the interplay
between
gauge-dependent and gauge-independent quantities in quantum
chemistry along
three recent directions: time-dependent density functional theory,
electron
localization, and self-consistent field iteration. In each
case, the focus on
the gauge-independent representation of the Grassmann manifold
brings
interesting (and sometimes surprising) numerical benefits.