Y. F. Adans, A. R. Aguirre, J. F. Gomes, G. V. Lobo, A. H. Zimerman
{"title":"SKdV, SmKdV flows and their supersymmetric gauge-Miura transformations","authors":"Y. F. Adans, A. R. Aguirre, J. F. Gomes, G. V. Lobo, A. H. Zimerman","doi":"arxiv-2403.16285","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The construction of Integrable Hierarchies in terms of zero curvature\nrepresentation provides a systematic construction for a series of integrable\nnon-linear evolution equations (flows) which shares a common affine Lie\nalgebraic structure. The integrable hierarchies are then classified in terms of\na decomposition of the underlying affine Lie algebra $\\hat \\lie $ into graded\nsubspaces defined by a grading operator $Q$. In this paper we shall discuss\nexplicitly the simplest case of the affine $\\hat {sl}(2)$ Kac-Moody algebra\nwithin the principal gradation given rise to the KdV and mKdV hierarchies and\nextend to supersymmetric models. It is known that the positive mKdV sub-hierachy is associated to some\npositive odd graded abelian subalgebra with elements denoted by $E^{(2n+1)}$.\nEach of these elements in turn, defines a time evolution equation according to\ntime $t=t_{2n+1}$. An interesting observation is that for negative grades, the\nzero curvature representation allows both, even or odd sub-hierarchies. In both\ncases, the flows are non-local leading to integro-differential equations.\nWhilst positive and negative odd sub-hierarchies admit zero vacuum solutions,\nthe negative even admits strictly non-zero vacuum solutions. Soliton solutions\ncan be constructed by gauge transforming the zero curvature from the vacuum\ninto a non trivial configuration (dressing method). Inspired by the dressing transformation method, we have constructed a\ngauge-Miura transformation mapping mKdV into KdV flows. Interesting new results concerns the negative\ngrade sector of the mKdV hierarchy in which a double degeneracy of flows (odd\nand its consecutive even) of mKdV are mapped into a single odd KdV flow. These\nresults are extended to supersymmetric hierarchies based upon the affine $\\hat\n{sl}(2,1)$ super-algebra.","PeriodicalId":501592,"journal":{"name":"arXiv - PHYS - Exactly Solvable and Integrable Systems","volume":"273 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"arXiv - PHYS - Exactly Solvable and Integrable Systems","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/arxiv-2403.16285","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The construction of Integrable Hierarchies in terms of zero curvature
representation provides a systematic construction for a series of integrable
non-linear evolution equations (flows) which shares a common affine Lie
algebraic structure. The integrable hierarchies are then classified in terms of
a decomposition of the underlying affine Lie algebra $\hat \lie $ into graded
subspaces defined by a grading operator $Q$. In this paper we shall discuss
explicitly the simplest case of the affine $\hat {sl}(2)$ Kac-Moody algebra
within the principal gradation given rise to the KdV and mKdV hierarchies and
extend to supersymmetric models. It is known that the positive mKdV sub-hierachy is associated to some
positive odd graded abelian subalgebra with elements denoted by $E^{(2n+1)}$.
Each of these elements in turn, defines a time evolution equation according to
time $t=t_{2n+1}$. An interesting observation is that for negative grades, the
zero curvature representation allows both, even or odd sub-hierarchies. In both
cases, the flows are non-local leading to integro-differential equations.
Whilst positive and negative odd sub-hierarchies admit zero vacuum solutions,
the negative even admits strictly non-zero vacuum solutions. Soliton solutions
can be constructed by gauge transforming the zero curvature from the vacuum
into a non trivial configuration (dressing method). Inspired by the dressing transformation method, we have constructed a
gauge-Miura transformation mapping mKdV into KdV flows. Interesting new results concerns the negative
grade sector of the mKdV hierarchy in which a double degeneracy of flows (odd
and its consecutive even) of mKdV are mapped into a single odd KdV flow. These
results are extended to supersymmetric hierarchies based upon the affine $\hat
{sl}(2,1)$ super-algebra.