response letter

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\documentclass[10pt]{letter}
\usepackage{UPS_letterhead,xcolor,mhchem,mathpazo,ragged2e,hyperref}
\newcommand{\alert}[1]{\textcolor{red}{#1}}
\definecolor{darkgreen}{HTML}{009900}
\begin{document}
\begin{letter}%
{To the Editors of the \textit{Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter}}
\opening{Dear Editors,}
\justifying
Please find attached a revised version of the manuscript entitled
\begin{quote}
\textit{``Perturbation Theory in the Complex Plane: Exceptional Points and Where to Find Them''}.
\end{quote}
We thank the reviewers for their constructive comments.
Our detailed responses to their comments can be found below.
For convenience, changes are highlighted in red in the revised version of the manuscript.
We look forward to hearing from you.
\closing{Sincerely, the authors.}
%%% REVIEWER 1 %%%
\noindent \textbf{\large Authors' answer to Reviewer \#1}
\begin{itemize}
\item
{In this manuscript, the authors provide a comprehensive and thorough discussion of the role of exceptional point singularities in determining the performance of perturbation methods of electronic structure theory. The main subject considered is the well-known Moller-Plesset (MP) theory to calculate the electronic correlation energy, and various resummation techniques aimed to improve the convergence of the MP series. The system used to illustrate the application of MP theory is the Hubbard dimer. The authors suggest how the combination of resummation methods and acceleration techniques, such as the Shanks transformation, can significantly improve the accuracy of pertubative approaches. The manuscript is well written and has the format of a very useful and informative review of the progress done in the field. For that reason, I was worried that it could not fit the audience of the Journal of Physics Condensed Matter journal, and it might be better placed in a different journal, focusing on reviews. Besides that point, I found some merit in the application of the Shanks transformation to different approximants for both the restricted and unrestricted versions of the theory, which focus on the corresponding set of orbitals. Thus, I am glad to recommend publication.}
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\end{itemize}
%%% REVIEWER 2 %%%
\noindent \textbf{\large Authors' answer to Reviewer \#2}
\begin{itemize}
\item
{The topical review "Perturbation theory in the complex plane: Exceptional points and where to find them" reviews the origin and meaning of exceptional points in quantum chemistry. The Hubbard dimer is used throughout as an illustrative example for the restricted and unrestricted cases, exact solution (FCI), Hartree-Fock, and Rayleigh-Schrodinger perturbation theory. The authors review the ways that MP series in common quantum chemical applications can behave, using the classification schemes developed in the literature. Finally, they discuss alternative methods to approximate the Taylor series of RS theory by other functions which may have better, faster, or otherwise more robust convergence properties, including their own calculations based on the Shanks transformation.
This topical review is very well done and I recommend it for publication as is. I list my comments below for the authors to address if they choose. Because this manuscript is meant as a review and to have instructional value, my comments are a bit more pedagogical or curiousity driven than may be expected for a normal review. I am not an expert in this exact area, so my questions are meant to represent those a typical reader might have. My questions do not need to all be addressed before the manuscript is published.}
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\item
{I
How am I to actually interpret the electronic energy E of such a non-Hermitian Hamiltonian? Is the energy associated with just the real part of the Riemann surface $E(\lambda)$ at every point, is it computable from some combination of Re and Im parts, or is the ordinary meaning of the energy lost completely? Is there a lifetime interpretation for the imaginary part of this non-Hermitian Hamiltonian in the wave function problem as in Green's function theory? Maybe something can be said about this because I suspect the imaginary part is somehow related to losses. This is hinted at in the introduction but was the first question that entered my mind.}
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\item
{IIe
Could the authors make it very clear what is meant here by ``symmetry broken"? This term is seen and used very frequently but can be kind of ambiguous and rarely explained completely. What is the symmetry that is broken? Also, what exactly is meant by ``symmetry-pure" when referring to the molecular orbitals? This refers to equal composition of left and right sites, but maybe this can be said explicitly. A useful counterexample would be a mixing angle of zero, in which case the orbitals are either definitely left or definitely right.}
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\item
{I personally can get confused because both spatial and spin symmetries are in play (or so I think). At high U/t, left and right sites are both open shell with one electron each. Am I to think of this as a broken spatial symmetry, broken spin symmetry, or both?}
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\item
{It could be emphasized that Eqs. 20, 21a, and 21b are valid for both the RHF and UHF cases, which is why these equations lack an RHF or UHF subscript. Also, in the general case (either RHF or UHF), the bonding orbitals for the two sigma values are occupied and the two antibonding orbitals are unoccupied. Bonding and antibonding notation is not so common in the condensed matter literature and it may be missed that these correspond to occupied and empty single-particle states.}
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\alert{bla bla bla}
\item
{IIf
What am I to think of values of $\lambda$ where $|\lambda|>1$? I guess this is mathematically well defined and useful for understanding $r_c$, but the physical system always corresponds to $|\lambda|=1$, even in the complex case. I suppose one needs to understand the singularities at other values of $\lambda$ in order to know the convergence of the series at the value we want, $\lambda = 1$. Some discussion could already be made that these values are not necessarily physical but determine the behavior of the physical series. Certain values away from $\lambda=1$ can also have physical meaning, like the autoionization process discussed later.}
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\alert{bla bla bla}
\item
{IIIc
To be extra careful, should it be said that the RMP series is either convergent or divergent at the physical coupling value $|\lambda|=1$? I guess for either value of U, the series is convergent if you are close enough to the origin.}
The language describing the cylinder with unit radius could be improved from: "the radius of convergence indicated by the vertical cylinder of unit radius" I first thought the cylinder was marking the radius of convergence. It is meant to show the position of the EPs and indicate if the radius of convergence is $>1$ or $<1$. The language could be improved.
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\alert{bla bla bla}
IIId
\item
{The classification of front-door and back-door intruder states is not totally clear. I raise this point because the journal is JPCM, and these terms are not common in condensed matter literature. Are intruder states equivalent to states creating exceptional points that ruin the series convergence?}
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\item
{IIIe
Has "critical point" been defined yet?}
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\item
{IIIf
The explanation of the critical point as the occurrence of the autoionization process is great and makes sense to me. I must say, though, I have trouble visualizing this in Figs. 7 and 8. I can trace any one curve continuously along the $\lambda$ axis, and even their ordering does not change. How does the critical point appear in these figures? Presumably, it is because the curves exactly intersect at the CP, but this does not on the surface appear so different than the avoided crossings related to the EPs discussed in earlier sections.
So what exactly in these figures indicates the suddent and abrupt change in the eigenstates that makes it a CP? Is it the derivative discontinuity in the energy on the real $\lambda$ axis, whereas the derivative on the real axis for an avoided crossing due to an exceptional point is continuous? Can this gradient discontinuity be used to define the CP? How do I see something like the autoionization in this figure? If this is correct, it could be emphasized a bit more by a comment referring specifically to that figure.
Is it possible to circle the CP as one does for an EP? Is there any meaning to this?}
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\item
{IV
Can something more be said about how these methods are fitted (briefly, and in a general way)? For example, how does one fit the Pade coefficients? Presumably, the exact function is known to some order and/or inside of some radius of convergence. The approximant is fitted in this region to match the exact function and then only the approximant is used beyond the original radius of convergence or at higher order.}
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\item
{Throughout the manuscript, the figures are excellent and really help the understanding. The authors have clearly taken time to prepare the manuscript and it can be published immediately.}
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\end{itemize}
\end{letter}
\end{document}

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