Neural Quantum States and Peaked Molecular Wave Functions: Curse or Blessing?
The field of neural quantum states has recently experienced a tremendous progress, making them a competitive tool of computational quantum many-body physics. However, their largest achievements to date mostly concern interacting spin systems, while their utility for quantum chemistry remains yet to...
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Zusammenfassung: | The field of neural quantum states has recently experienced a tremendous
progress, making them a competitive tool of computational quantum many-body
physics. However, their largest achievements to date mostly concern interacting
spin systems, while their utility for quantum chemistry remains yet to be
demonstrated. Two main complications are the peaked structure of the molecular
wave functions, which impedes sampling, and large number of terms in second
quantised Hamiltonians, which hinders scaling to larger molecule sizes. In this
paper we address these issues jointly and argue that the peaked structure might
actually be key to drastically more efficient calculations. Specifically, we
introduce a novel algorithm for autoregressive sampling without replacement and
a procedure to calculate a computationally cheaper surrogate for the local
energy. We complement them with a custom modification of the stochastic
reconfiguration optimisation technique and a highly optimised GPU
implementation. As a result, our calculations require substantially less
resources and exhibit more than order of magnitude speedup compared to the
previous works. On a single GPU we study molecules comprising up to 118 qubits
and outperform the ``golden standard'' CCSD(T) benchmark in Hilbert spaces of
$\sim 10^{15}$ Slater determinants, which is orders of magnitude larger than
what was previously achieved. We believe that our work underscores the prospect
of NQS for challenging quantum chemistry calculations and serves as a
favourable ground for the future method development. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.07625 |