new

Get trending papers in your email inbox!

Subscribe

Daily Papers

byAK and the research community

Jun 3

What types of chemical problems benefit from density-corrected DFT? A probe using an extensive and chemically diverse test suite

For the large and chemically diverse GMTKN55 benchmark suite, we have studied the performance of density-corrected density functional theory (HF-DFT), compared to self-consistent DFT, for several pure and hybrid GGA and meta-GGA exchange-correlation (XC) functionals (PBE, BLYP, TPSS, SCAN) as a function of the percentage of HF exchange in the hybrid. The D4 empirical dispersion correction has been added throughout. For subsets dominated by dynamical correlation -- particularly noncovalent interaction subsets -- HF-DFT is highly beneficial, particularly at low HF exchange percentages. For subsets with significant static correlation (i.e., where a Hartree-Fock determinant is not a good zero-order wavefunction), HF-DFT may do more harm than good. While the self-consistent series show optima at or near 37.5% (i.e., 3/8) for all four XC functionals -- consistent with Grimme's proposal of the PBE38 functional -- HF-BnLYP-D4, HF-PBEn-D4, and HF-TPSSn-D4 all exhibit minima nearer 25% (i.e., 1/4). Intriguingly, for HF-SCANn-D4, the minimum is near 10%, but the weighted mean absolute error (WTMAD2) for GMTKN55 is only barely lower than that of HF-SCAN-D4 (i.e., where the post-HF step is a pure meta-GGA). The latter becomes an attractive option, only slightly more costly than pure Hartree-Fock, and devoid of adjustable parameters other than the three in the dispersion correction. Moreover, its WTMAD2 is only surpassed by the highly empirical M06-2X and by the combinatorically optimized empirical range-separated hybrids wB97X-V and wB97M-V.

  • 2 authors
·
Oct 4, 2020

A mesh-free hybrid Chebyshev-Tucker tensor format with applications to multi-particle modelling

In this paper, we introduce a mesh-free two-level hybrid Tucker tensor format for approximation of multivariate functions, which combines the product Chebyshev interpolation with the ALS-based Tucker decomposition of the tensor of Chebyshev coefficients. It allows to avoid the expenses of the rank-structured approximation of function-related tensors defined on large spacial grids, while benefiting from the Tucker decomposition of the rather small core tensor of Chebyshev coefficients. This leads to nearly optimal Tucker rank parameters which are close to the results for well established Tucker-ALS algorithm applied to the large grid-based tensors. These rank parameters inherited from the Tucker-ALS decomposition of the coefficient tensor can be much less than the polynomial degrees of the initial Chebyshev interpolant via function independent basis set. Furthermore, the tensor product Chebyshev polynomials discretized on a tensor grid leads to a low-rank two-level orthogonal algebraic Tucker tensor that approximates the initial function with controllable accuracy. It is shown that our techniques could be gainfully applied to the long-range part of the electrostatic potential of multi-particle systems approximated in the range-separated tensor format. Error and complexity estimates of the proposed methods are presented. We demonstrate the efficiency of the suggested method numerically on examples of the long-range components of multi-particle interaction potentials generated by 3D Newton kernel for large bio-molecule systems and lattice-type compounds.

  • 4 authors
·
Mar 3, 2025

Quantum Machine Learning for Cyber-Physical Anomaly Detection in Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: A Leakage-Free Evaluation with Proxy-Audited Feature Sets

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are cyber-physical systems whose attack surface spans networked avionics and on-board sensor fusion: a compromised GPS or battery module can mimic a benign mission segment and evade naive anomaly detectors. We present a leakage-free evaluation of quantum machine learning for UAV anomaly detection on the multi-sensor TLM:UAV benchmark. Three contributions support the study. (i) A group-aware temporal protocol (B2) partitions the dataset into ten contiguous TimeUS blocks and evaluates over ten seeds, eliminating the inflation produced by random stratified splits that mix neighbouring samples. (ii) A three-mode feature audit (full/loose/strict) quantifies how much accuracy stems from instantaneous physical signals versus contextual proxies (cumulative energy, battery state, GPS trajectory). (iii) A hybrid XGBoost + Data Reuploading (DRU) classifier is benchmarked against five paired non-linear controls (raw, PCA, polynomial-2, random-RBF, and an untrained DRU map) under identical budgets. The standalone DRU does not consistently match the strongest classical baseline across seeds; however, the trained-DRU hybrid is the only model whose mean F1 macro shifts upward from full to strict (+0.05), a directional signal that the per-seed standard deviations prevent from being interpreted as a statistically established difference. The trained-DRU hybrid also records the lowest mean false-alarm rate under proxy-free evaluation, subject to the inter-seed variance reported. We frame this as an incremental, reproducible quantum-enhanced hybrid benefit, and provide an open Qiskit 2.x implementation as a benchmark for cybersecurity analytics in NISQ-era aerospace systems.

  • 5 authors
·
May 27