Photoemission spectroscopy from the three-body Green's function.
ORAL
Abstract
We present an original approach for the calculation of direct and inverse photo-emission spectra from first principles.
The main goal is to go beyond the standard Green's function approaches, such as the GW method, in order to find a good description not only of the quasiparticles but also of the satellite structures, which are of particular importance in strongly correlated materials.
Our method uses as a key quantity the three-body Green's function, or, more precisely, its hole-hole-electron and electron-electron-hole parts.
We show that, contrary to the one-body Green's function, satellites are already present in the corresponding non-interacting Green's function. Therefore, simple approximations to the three-body self-energy, which is defined by the Dyson equation for the three-body Green's function and which contains many-body effects, can still yield accurate spectral functions. In particular, the self-energy can be chosen to be static which could simplify a self-consistent solution of the Dyson equation.
We also show how the one-body Green's function can be retrieved from the three-body Green's function.
We illustrate our approach by applying it to the symmetric Hubbard dimer.
The main goal is to go beyond the standard Green's function approaches, such as the GW method, in order to find a good description not only of the quasiparticles but also of the satellite structures, which are of particular importance in strongly correlated materials.
Our method uses as a key quantity the three-body Green's function, or, more precisely, its hole-hole-electron and electron-electron-hole parts.
We show that, contrary to the one-body Green's function, satellites are already present in the corresponding non-interacting Green's function. Therefore, simple approximations to the three-body self-energy, which is defined by the Dyson equation for the three-body Green's function and which contains many-body effects, can still yield accurate spectral functions. In particular, the self-energy can be chosen to be static which could simplify a self-consistent solution of the Dyson equation.
We also show how the one-body Green's function can be retrieved from the three-body Green's function.
We illustrate our approach by applying it to the symmetric Hubbard dimer.
–
Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2110.05623
Presenters
-
gabriele riva
CNRS, ETSF
Authors
-
gabriele riva
CNRS, ETSF
-
Jan A Berger
CNRS, ETSF, Univ Paul Sabatier
-
Pina Romaniello
CNRS, ETSF