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A quantum algorithm to simulate the real time dynamics of two-flavor massive Gross-Neveu model is presented in Schrodinger picture. We implement the simulation on a classic computer by applying the matrix product state representation. The real time evolutions of up to four particles on a site in initial state are figured out in space-time coordinate. The state evolutions are effectively affected by fermion mass and coupling constant of the model. Especially when the mass of fermion is small enough and the coupling is strong enough, the fundamental fermions evolve synchronistically in space from the two-fermion and four-fermion initial states. These are also the conditions on which the bound states made up of fundamental fermion pairs were found to arise automatically in the literatures.
We renormalize the SU(N) Gross-Neveu model in the modified minimal subtraction (MSbar) scheme at four loops and determine the beta-function at this order. The theory ceases to be multiplicatively renormalizable when dimensionally regularized due to t
We prove that ground states of gapped local Hamiltonians on an infinite spin chain can be efficiently approximated by matrix product states with a bond dimension which scales as D~(L-1)/epsilon, where any local quantity on L consecutive spins is approximated to accuracy epsilon.
The large N limit of the 3-d Gross-Neveu model is here studied on manifolds with positive and negative constant curvature. Using the $zeta$-function regularization we analyze the critical properties of this model on the spaces $S^2 times S^1$ and $H^
A C++ library, named ZKCM, has been developed for the purpose of multiprecision matrix calculations, which is based on the GNU MP and MPFR libraries. It is especially convenient for writing programs involving tensor-product operations, tracing-out op
While general quantum many-body systems require exponential resources to be simulated on a classical computer, systems of non-interacting fermions can be simulated exactly using polynomially scaling resources. Such systems may be of interest in their