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With the increasing availability of powerful computers, attempts to calculate the electronic structure and properties of molecules by the direct ab initio solution of a many-body Schrodinger equation have received a great stimulus. The authors review the mainstream developments in quantum chemistry and give a straightforward account of some of the many-body techniques borrowed, with appropriate modifications, from other areas of physics-field theory, nuclear theory and solid-state theory. After a historical introduction, the traditional approach based on the self-consistent field and the method of configuration interaction is developed in detail. This is followed by the introduction of the cluster expansion, various types of correlated electron-pair theory, and diagrammatic perturbation methods. Finally, propagator and Green function techniques are reviewed, not only as a means of calculating transition energies but also as an alternative approach to the determination of the electronic ground state.
McWeeny et al. (Mon,) studied this question.