A multiscale reduced basis method for Schr\"{o}dinger equation with multiscale and random potentials
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 12:38 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A multiscale reduced basis method solves the semiclassical Schrödinger equation by making spatial grid size proportional to the semiclassical parameter and random samples inversely proportional to it.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The multiscale reduced basis method constructs basis functions in the physical space using an optimization method and the proper orthogonal decomposition, and employs the quasi-Monte Carlo method in the random space, achieving efficiency where the spatial gridsize is proportional to the semiclassical parameter and the number of samples in the random space is inversely proportional to the same parameter.
What carries the argument
Multiscale reduced basis functions in physical space constructed via optimization and proper orthogonal decomposition, paired with quasi-Monte Carlo sampling in random space.
If this is right
- Spatial discretization cost scales linearly rather than inversely with the semiclassical parameter.
- Fewer random samples suffice as the semiclassical parameter decreases.
- The number of samples required to build the reduced basis can be chosen on theoretical grounds.
- Convergence of the overall method admits analysis that is confirmed numerically.
- Anderson localization for correlated random potentials becomes accessible in both one and two spatial dimensions.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same basis-construction strategy could be tested on other semiclassical wave equations whose solutions develop rapid spatial oscillations.
- Because the basis does not depend on any single realization, the method may directly support ensemble statistics without recomputing the basis for each draw.
- The observed scaling suggests that three-dimensional simulations of heterogeneous quantum systems could become feasible once the reduced-basis dimension is controlled.
Load-bearing premise
The optimization procedure and proper orthogonal decomposition can construct a low-dimensional multiscale reduced basis that accurately represents the solution for the class of multiscale random potentials considered, without requiring a priori knowledge of the specific realization.
What would settle it
A comparison, for a fixed realization of the random potential, between the reduced-basis solution computed on a grid of size proportional to the semiclassical parameter and a reference solution on a much finer grid, checking whether the difference remains small as the semiclassical parameter is driven toward zero.
Figures
read the original abstract
The semiclassical Schr\"{o}dinger equation with multiscale and random potentials often appears when studying electron dynamics in heterogeneous quantum systems. As time evolves, the wavefunction develops high-frequency oscillations in both the physical space and the random space, which poses severe challenges for numerical methods. In this paper, we propose a multiscale reduced basis method, where we construct multiscale reduced basis functions using an optimization method and the proper orthogonal decomposition method in the physical space and employ the quasi-Monte Carlo method in the random space. Our method is verified to be efficient: the spatial gridsize is only proportional to the semiclassical parameter and the number of samples in the random space is inversely proportional to the same parameter. Several theoretical aspects of the proposed method, including how to determine the number of samples in the construction of multiscale reduced basis and convergence analysis, are studied with numerical justification. In addition, we investigate the Anderson localization phenomena for Schr\"{o}dinger equation with correlated random potentials in both 1D and 2D.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes a multiscale reduced basis method for the semiclassical Schrödinger equation with multiscale random potentials. Reduced basis functions are constructed via an optimization procedure combined with proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) in physical space; quasi-Monte Carlo (QMC) sampling is used in the random space. The central claim is that the method is efficient, with spatial grid size proportional to the semiclassical parameter ε and the number of QMC samples scaling as 1/ε; convergence and the choice of sample count in basis construction are justified numerically, and the method is applied to study Anderson localization in 1D and 2D.
Significance. If the reduced-basis dimension remains bounded independently of ε, the approach would yield a practical, scalable solver for high-frequency oscillatory problems in random media, directly enabling quantitative studies of localization phenomena that are otherwise prohibitive. The numerical verification of convergence rates and sample counts provides concrete evidence of utility even if a full a-priori theory is absent.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract and the efficiency claim: the stated scalings (grid size O(ε), QMC samples O(1/ε)) are load-bearing and rest on the assumption that the POD dimension D produced by the optimization procedure on a finite training set remains independent of ε (or at worst logarithmic). No argument or numerical test is supplied showing that the Kolmogorov n-width of the solution manifold over the class of multiscale random potentials stays bounded as ε→0; if D grows with 1/ε the online cost per sample would exceed the claimed scaling.
- [Basis construction and sample determination] Section on basis construction and numerical justification of sample count: the optimization+POD procedure is presented as constructing a low-dimensional basis without a-priori knowledge of individual realizations, yet the training-set size and the stopping criterion for the number of POD modes are chosen post-hoc. Without a quantitative table or plot of required D versus ε (or versus the correlation length of the random potential), it is impossible to verify that the claimed scalings survive for the full range of ε considered.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract states that 'several theoretical aspects … are studied with numerical justification' but supplies no explicit error tables, observed convergence rates, or comparison against a reference solution; adding a compact table of L² or H¹ errors versus ε and versus number of basis functions would strengthen the numerical section.
- [Notation] Notation for the semiclassical parameter and the random-potential correlation length is introduced without a single consolidated table of symbols; a short nomenclature table would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments on the efficiency claims. We agree that explicit numerical evidence for the reduced-basis dimension D versus ε would strengthen the manuscript and will add it in revision.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract and the efficiency claim: the stated scalings (grid size O(ε), QMC samples O(1/ε)) are load-bearing and rest on the assumption that the POD dimension D produced by the optimization procedure on a finite training set remains independent of ε (or at worst logarithmic). No argument or numerical test is supplied showing that the Kolmogorov n-width of the solution manifold over the class of multiscale random potentials stays bounded as ε→0; if D grows with 1/ε the online cost per sample would exceed the claimed scaling.
Authors: We agree that the claimed scalings require D to remain bounded (or grow at most logarithmically) as ε→0. The manuscript provides numerical verification of overall convergence rates and efficiency across a range of ε values, which implicitly supports controlled growth of D. To directly address the request for explicit evidence on the Kolmogorov n-width, the revised manuscript will include a dedicated plot or table of the POD dimension D versus ε (and versus correlation length) for the random potentials used. revision: yes
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Referee: [Basis construction and sample determination] Section on basis construction and numerical justification of sample count: the optimization+POD procedure is presented as constructing a low-dimensional basis without a-priori knowledge of individual realizations, yet the training-set size and the stopping criterion for the number of POD modes are chosen post-hoc. Without a quantitative table or plot of required D versus ε (or versus the correlation length of the random potential), it is impossible to verify that the claimed scalings survive for the full range of ε considered.
Authors: The training-set size and POD stopping criterion were selected via the numerical convergence studies already reported in the paper. We acknowledge that a single, consolidated quantitative table or plot of D versus ε would make verification of the scalings more transparent and direct. In the revision we will add this plot (or table) to the basis-construction section. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; efficiency verified numerically against external benchmarks
full rationale
The paper constructs a multiscale reduced basis via optimization and POD in physical space plus QMC in random space, then states that the claimed O(ε) grid and O(1/ε) sample scalings are verified by numerical experiments. No load-bearing step reduces these scalings to fitted parameters by construction, nor invokes a self-citation chain whose justification collapses into the present work. Convergence analysis is likewise supported by numerical justification rather than a closed deductive loop. The derivation therefore remains self-contained and externally falsifiable.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- Number of reduced basis functions
axioms (2)
- domain assumption The potentials admit a low-dimensional multiscale representation capturable by POD after optimization.
- standard math Standard Sobolev regularity and boundedness assumptions on the potential and initial data hold.
Reference graph
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