{ "id": "0712.0483", "version": "v2", "published": "2007-12-04T13:34:27.000Z", "updated": "2010-09-27T12:28:45.000Z", "title": "Computational Complexity of interacting electrons and fundamental limitations of Density Functional Theory", "authors": [ "Norbert Schuch", "Frank Verstraete" ], "comment": "8 pages, 3 figures. v2: Version accepted at Nature Physics; differs significantly from v1 (including new title). Includes an extra appendix (not contained in the journal version) on the NP-completeness of Hartree-Fock, which is taken from v1", "journal": "Nature Physics 5, 732 - 735 (2009)", "doi": "10.1038/nphys1370", "categories": [ "quant-ph" ], "abstract": "One of the central problems in quantum mechanics is to determine the ground state properties of a system of electrons interacting via the Coulomb potential. Since its introduction by Hohenberg, Kohn, and Sham, Density Functional Theory (DFT) has become the most widely used and successful method for simulating systems of interacting electrons, making their original work one of the most cited in physics. In this letter, we show that the field of computational complexity imposes fundamental limitations on DFT, as an efficient description of the associated universal functional would allow to solve any problem in the class QMA (the quantum version of NP) and thus particularly any problem in NP in polynomial time. This follows from the fact that finding the ground state energy of the Hubbard model in an external magnetic field is a hard problem even for a quantum computer, while given the universal functional it can be computed efficiently using DFT. This provides a clear illustration how the field of quantum computing is useful even if quantum computers would never be built.", "revisions": [ { "version": "v2", "updated": "2010-09-27T12:28:45.000Z" } ], "analyses": { "keywords": [ "density functional theory", "interacting electrons", "computational complexity imposes fundamental limitations", "ground state", "quantum computer" ], "tags": [ "journal article" ], "publication": { "journal": "Nature Physics", "year": 2009, "month": "Oct", "volume": 5, "number": 10, "pages": 732 }, "note": { "typesetting": "TeX", "pages": 8, "language": "en", "license": "arXiv", "status": "editable", "adsabs": "2009NatPh...5..732S" } } }