Hartree-Fock Theory
In Hartree-Fock (HF) theory the energy of a system
is given as a sum of five components:
EHF = ENN + ET + Ev + Ecoul +
Eexch
The nuclear-nuclear repulsion ENN describes the electrostatic repulsion between
the nuclei and is independent of the electron coordinates. In time-independent HF theory, the
kinetic energy of the nuclei is not, but the kinetic energy of the electrons ET
is considered. Together with the nuclear-electron attraction energy Ev it depends
on the coordinates of one electron. The classical electron-electron Coulomb repulsion energy
Ecoul and the non-classical electron-electron exchange energy Eexch
depend on the coordinates of two electrons. Calculation of these last two terms constitutes
the main effort in HF calculations and is also responsible for the unfavorable formal scaling
of computational effort as the fourth power of basis functions used for the description of
the wavefunction. The particular assumption made in HF theory is that each electron feels
the other electrons only as an average charge cloud, but not as individual electrons.
https://www.cup.uni-muenchen.de/ch/compchem/energy/hf1.html
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