State-specific approximations can provide a more accurate representation of challenging electronic excitations by enabling relaxation of the electron density. While state-specific wave functions are known to be local minima or… Click to show full abstract
State-specific approximations can provide a more accurate representation of challenging electronic excitations by enabling relaxation of the electron density. While state-specific wave functions are known to be local minima or saddle points of the approximate energy, the global structure of the exact electronic energy remains largely unexplored. In this contribution, a geometric perspective on the exact electronic energy landscape is introduced. On the exact energy landscape, ground and excited states form stationary points constrained to the surface of a hypersphere, and the corresponding Hessian index increases at each excitation level. The connectivity between exact stationary points is investigated, and the square-magnitude of the exact energy gradient is shown to be directly proportional to the Hamiltonian variance. The minimal basis Hartree–Fock and excited-state mean-field representations of singlet H2 (STO-3G) are then used to explore how the exact energy landscape controls the existence and properties of state-specific approximations. In particular, approximate excited states correspond to constrained stationary points on the exact energy landscape, and their Hessian index also increases for higher energies. Finally, the properties of the exact energy are used to derive the structure of the variance optimization landscape and elucidate the challenges faced by variance optimization algorithms, including the presence of unphysical saddle points or maxima of the variance.
               
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