Open-source software for building computational physics applications. Common C++ auxiliary modules required for various methods in computational physics such as the quantum Monte Carlo method are prepared. This software helps to build reusable codes and to reduce development time for complex computational science applications. It also supports parallel programming based on MPI or OpenMP.
Payware for first-principles quantum chemical calculation. This application performs molecular orbital calculation based on Hartree-Fock approximation, density functional method, and post-HF methods such as MP, f12, multi-configuration SCF, and coupled cluster method. It also implements calculation by path-integral instanton, quantum Monte Carlo, and density-matrix renormalization group method.
An open-source impurity solver based on the quantum Monte Carlo method. Thermal equilibrium states of interacting impurity systems, such as the impurity Anderson model, can be evaluated by the continuous-time hybridization-expansion quantum Monte Carlo method. It can be used as a solver of effective impurity models derived from the dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) and can deal with multi-orbital models. This package supports parallel computation by MPI and is developed based on the ALPSCore library.
A low-energy solver for a wide ranger of quantum lattice models (multi-orbital Hubbard model, Heisenberg model, Kondo-lattice model) by using variational Monte Carlo method. User can obtain high-accuracy wave functions for ground states of above models. Users flexibly choose the correlation factors in wavefunctions such as Gutzwiller, Jastrow, and doublon-holon binding factors and optimize more the ten thousand variational parameters. It is also possible to obtain the low-energy excited states by specifying the quantum number using the quantum number projection.
A library collection for numerical calculation of interacting quantum systems. Modern programming techniques are used in this library to implement common tasks for solving quantum impurity problems in dynamic mean-field theory in a simple and efficient way. It is written in C++ and Python, and includes tutorials using Jupyter Notebook.
i-PI is a universal force engine interface written in Python, designed to be used together with an ab-initio (or force-field based) evaluation of the interactions between the atoms. This application includes a large number of sophisticated methods such as replica exchange molecular dynamics (REMD) and path integral molecular dynamics (PIMD). Inter-atomic forces can be computed by using external codes such as CP2K, Quantum ESPRESSO and LAMMPS.
A collection of shell scripts for installing open-source applications and tools for computational materials science to macOS, Linux PC, cluster workstations, and major supercomputer systems in Japan. Major applications are preinstalled to the nation-wide joint-use supercomputer system at Institute for Solid State Physics, University of Tokyo by using MateriApps Installer.
DCA++ is a software framework to solve correlated electron problems with modern quantum cluster methods. This code provides a state of the art implementation of the dynamical cluster approximation (DCA) and its DCA+ extension. As the cluster solvers, DCA++ provides the continuous-time auxiliary field QMC (CT-AUX) , the continuous-time hybridization expansion (CT-HYB) restricted to single-site problems, the high temperature series expansion (HTS) and the exact diagonalization(ED).
w2dynamics is a hybridization-expansion continuous-time (CT-HYB) quantum Monte Carlo package, developed jointly in Wien and Würzburg. Users can calculate local two- and four-pointfermionic Green’s functions of multi-orbital impurity models. This application also provides DMFT Python code and an interface to wannier90 generated Hamiltonians.
Server for computing exact ground state of Ising model with random interacitons (Ising spin glasses). Users can specify the distributions of the interactions and the geometry of lattices. By inputting the informaiont of the model, users will receive the computational results by e-mail from the server.