Abstract
It is one of the central topics in theoretical chemistry to develop numerical methods such as
the transcorrelated method that inject electron correlations into the Hamiltonian by similarity
transformations. In the transcorrelated theory, electron correlations are incorporated by
the Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff (BCH) similarity transformation of the Hamiltonian using
exponential operators. The exponential operators are also used in the coupled cluster theory
(CC) and can be used to act the BCH transformation on the Hamiltonian. However, when
the similarity-transformed Hamiltonian by the CC amplitude is used with multi-reference
electronic structure theory, it is not known well to the best of the author’s knowledge how
it affects prediction of the electronic spectra which is experimentally important for atoms
and molecules. In this study, focusing on the electronic spectra of noble-gas atoms, we investigate
how an electronic structure is affected by the similarity-transformed Hamiltonian
with the CC amplitude combined with multi-reference electronic structure theory. The
complete active space (CAS) configuration interaction method using the BCH-similaritytransformed
Hamiltonians (the BCH-CASCI method) regardless of the size of the CAS, in
many cases the calculated values are closer than the CASCI method to the experimental
values of ionization potentials in the case of an Ar atom. The one-electron spectra obtained
by the BCH-CASCI method agreed generally with the CCSD method in an Ar atom
compared with those obtained by the CASCI method. However, in a Xe atom which is a
heavy element, the one-electron spectra which are obtained by this method are affected by
non-Hermitian operators.