QuSpin is a python package for performing exact diagonalization and real- or imaginary-time evolution for quantum many-body systems. Using QuSpin, for example, it is possible to study the many-body localization and the quantum quenches in the Heisenberg chain. Moreover, QuSpin specifies the symmetries in the systems such as the total magnetization, the parity, the spin inversion, the translation symmetry, and their combinations.
An open-source solver for the impurity problem based on the continuous-time quantum Monte Carlo method. Imaginary-time Green’s functions of the impurity Anderson model and the effective impurity model in the dynamical mean-field approximation can be calculated with high speed by using an efficient Monte Carlo algorithm. The main programs are written by C++, and can be called from Python scripts.
Ab initio quantum Monte Carlo solver for both molecular and bulk electronic systems. By using the geminal/Pfaffian wavefunction with the Jastrow correlator as the trial wavefunction, users can perform highly accurate variational calculations, structural optimizations and ab initio molecular dynamics for both classical and quantum nuclei.
An open-source application for quantum chemical calculation based on the density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG). For systems with a number of atomic orbitals, low-lying energy eigenvalues can be calculated in high accuracy of order of 1kcal/mol. This application is suitable especially to calculation of multi-orbital systems with one-dimensional topology such as chain-like or circular-like configuration of orbits.
A unified wrapper library for sequential and parallel versions of eigenvalue solvers. Sequential versions of dense-matrix diagonalization (LAPACK), parallel versions of dense-matrix diagonalization (EigenExa, ELPA, ScaLAPACK, etc.), and sequential/parallel versions of sparse-matrix diagonalization (SLEPc, Trilinos/Anasazi, etc.) can be installed quickly, and can be called from user’s program easily. Physical quantities written by eigenvalues or eigenvectors can also be evaluated by both sequential and parallel computation.
BEEMs is a Bayesian optimization tool of Effective Models (BEEMs). In BEEMs, the quantum lattice model solver HΦ is used as a forward problem solver to compute the magnetisation curve based on the given Hamiltonian. The deviation between the obtained magnetisation curve and the target magnetisation curve is used as a cost function, and the Bayesian optimization library PHYSBO is used to propose the next candidate point of the Hamiltonian for searching the minimum cost function
Library for calculating Pfaffian (square root of determinant), which is defined for skew-symmetric matrices. Algorithms are implemented in several languages (Fortran, Python, Matlab, Mathematica) and users can choose favorite one. Interfaces for C are also provided.
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.
An open-source application for simulation of low-dimensional interacting electron models based on density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG). For effective models of one-dimensional quantum systems and impurity systems, this application can treat not only physical quantities of ground states but also time evolution and finite-temperature physical quantities. The program is coded in C++, and can be called from MATLAB scripts.
ComDMFT is a massively parallel computational package to study the electronic structure of correlated-electron systems. Users can perform a parameter-free method based on ab initio linearized quasiparticle self-consistent GW (LQSGW) and dynamical mean field theory (DMFT).