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The second-order reduced density matrix method (the RDM method) has performed well in determining energies and properties of atomic and molecular systems, achieving coupled-cluster singles and doubles with perturbative triples (CC SD(T)) accuracy without using the wave-function. One question that arises is how well does the RDM method perform with the same conditions that result in CCSD(T) accuracy in the strong correlation limit. The simplest and a theoretically important model for strongly correlated electronic systems is the Hubbard model. In this paper, we establish the utility of the RDM method when employing the $P$, $Q$, $G$, $T1$ and $T2^prime$ conditions in the two-dimension al Hubbard model case and we conduct a thorough study applying the $4times 4$ Hubbard model employing a coefficients. Within the Hubbard Hamilt onian we found that even in the intermediate setting, where $U/t$ is between 4 and 10, the $P$, $Q$, $G$, $T1$ and $T2^prime$ conditions re produced good ground state energies.
Competing inhomogeneous orders are a central feature of correlated electron materials including the high-temperature superconductors. The two- dimensional Hubbard model serves as the canonical microscopic physical model for such systems. Multiple ord
The nonequilibrium dynamics of strongly-correlated fermions in lattice systems have attracted considerable interest in the condensed matter and ultracold atomic-gas communities. While experiments have made remarkable progress in recent years, there r
Two-dimensional density-matrix renormalization group method is employed to examine the ground state phase diagram of the Hubbard model on the triangular lattice at half filling. The calculation reveals two discontinuities in the double occupancy with
We present the continued fraction method (CFM) as a new microscopic approximation to the spectral density of the Hubbard model in the correlated metal phase away from half filling. The quantity expanded as a continued fraction is the single particle
We investigate the phases of the ionic Hubbard model in a two-dimensional square lattice using determinant quantum Monte Carlo (DQMC). At half-filling, when the interaction strength or the staggered potential dominate we find Mott and band insulators