Type B 3-fold supersymmetry and non-polynomial invariant subspaces
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5409666
DOI10.1063/1.4819500zbMath1312.81089arXiv1212.0611MaRDI QIDQ5409666
Publication date: 14 April 2014
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1212.0611
81Q05: Closed and approximate solutions to the Schrödinger, Dirac, Klein-Gordon and other equations of quantum mechanics
81Q60: Supersymmetry and quantum mechanics
81R20: Covariant wave equations in quantum theory, relativistic quantum mechanics
81R15: Operator algebra methods applied to problems in quantum theory
81Q80: Special quantum systems, such as solvable systems
Related Items
Cites Work
- A new family of \(N\)-fold supersymmetry: type B
- An extension of Bochner's problem: exceptional invariant subspaces
- Existence of different intermediate Hamiltonians in type A \(\mathcal N\)-fold supersymmetry. II: The \(\mathcal N= 3\) case
- Existence of different intermediate Hamiltonians in type A \({\mathcal N}\)-fold supersymmetry
- Classification of linear differential operators with an invariant subspace of monomials
- Normalizability of one-dimensional quasi-exactly solvable Schrödinger operators
- Type A \(N\)-fold supersymmetry and generalized Bender-Dunne polynomials
- Quasi-exactly-solvable problems and sl(2) algebra
- On a general form of $\mathcal {N}$-fold supersymmetry
- Quasi-exact solvability and the direct approach to invariant subspaces
- Nonlinear pseudo-supersymmetry in the framework of -fold supersymmetry
- N -fold supersymmetry and quasi-solvability associated with X2-Laguerre polynomials
- Quasi-exact solvability in a general polynomial setting
- A novel multi-parameter family of quantum systems with partially broken -fold supersymmetry
- Invariant modules and the reduction of nonlinear partial differential equations to dynamical systems
- General forms of a \(N\)-fold supersymmetric family
- sl(2) construction of type A \(N\)-fold supersymmetry
- \(N\)-fold supersymmetry in quantum mechanics: general formalism