TY - JOUR KW - paper KW - theory AU - Adrian Stan AU - Pina Romaniello AU - Santiago Rigamonti AU - Lucia Reining AU - J Berger AB - Many-body theory is largely based on self-consistent equations that are constructed in terms of the physical quantity of interest itself, for example the density. Therefore, the calculation of important properties such as total energies or photoemission spectra requires the solution of nonlinear equations that have unphysical and physical solutions. In this work we show in which circumstances one runs into an unphysical solution, and we indicate how one can overcome this problem. Moreover, we solve the puzzle of when and why the interacting Green\textquoterights function does not unambiguously determine the underlying system, given in terms of its potential, or non-interacting Green\textquoterights function. Our results are general since they originate from the fundamental structure of the equations. The absorption spectrum of lithium fluoride is shown as one illustration, and observations in the literature for some widely used models are explained by our approach. Our findings apply to both the weak and strong-correlation regimes. For the strong-correlation regime we show that one cannot use the expressions that are obtained from standard perturbation theory, and we suggest a different approach that is exact in the limit of strong interaction. BT - New Journal of Physics M1 - 9 N2 - Many-body theory is largely based on self-consistent equations that are constructed in terms of the physical quantity of interest itself, for example the density. Therefore, the calculation of important properties such as total energies or photoemission spectra requires the solution of nonlinear equations that have unphysical and physical solutions. In this work we show in which circumstances one runs into an unphysical solution, and we indicate how one can overcome this problem. Moreover, we solve the puzzle of when and why the interacting Green\textquoterights function does not unambiguously determine the underlying system, given in terms of its potential, or non-interacting Green\textquoterights function. Our results are general since they originate from the fundamental structure of the equations. The absorption spectrum of lithium fluoride is shown as one illustration, and observations in the literature for some widely used models are explained by our approach. Our findings apply to both the weak and strong-correlation regimes. For the strong-correlation regime we show that one cannot use the expressions that are obtained from standard perturbation theory, and we suggest a different approach that is exact in the limit of strong interaction. PY - 2015 EP - 093045 T2 - New Journal of Physics TI - Unphysical and physical solutions in many-body theories: from weak to strong correlation UR - http://stacks.iop.org/1367-2630/17/i=9/a=093045 VL - 17 ER -