Supersymmetry and Quantum Mechanics
Fred Cooper, Avinash Khare, Uday Sukhatme

TL;DR
This paper reviews the application of supersymmetry to quantum mechanics, highlighting new solvable potentials, approximation methods, and connections to integrable systems, with implications for tunneling, large N expansions, and more general symmetries.
Contribution
It introduces new exactly solvable shape invariant potentials, explores approximation techniques, and discusses extensions like parasupersymmetry in quantum mechanics.
Findings
New shape invariant potentials including self-similar ones
Supersymmetry-inspired WKB approximation is exact for certain potentials
Enhanced understanding of tunneling and large N expansions using supersymmetry
Abstract
In the past ten years, the ideas of supersymmetry have been profitably applied to many nonrelativistic quantum mechanical problems. In particular, there is now a much deeper understanding of why certain potentials are analytically solvable and an array of powerful new approximation methods for handling potentials which are not exactly solvable. In this report, we review the theoretical formulation of supersymmetric quantum mechanics and discuss many applications. Exactly solvable potentials can be understood in terms of a few basic ideas which include supersymmetric partner potentials, shape invariance and operator transformations. Familiar solvable potentials all have the property of shape invariance. We describe new exactly solvable shape invariant potentials which include the recently discovered self-similar potentials as a special case. The connection between inverse scattering,…
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