The notion of "supersymmetry" that I am aware of proceeds as follows. One fixes a spacetime $\mathbb R^n$ and signature; I will write $\mathrm{SO}(n)$ for the corresponding group of orthogonal transformations, as if I had chosen Euclidean signature, but of course this story also works with $\mathrm{SO}(n-1,1)$, .... In any case, $\mathrm{SO}(n)$ has a double cover $\mathrm{Spin}(n)$, which is usually the universal cover. The usual symmetry of usual spacetime is the group of rigid transformations $\mathrm{ISO}(n) = \mathrm{SO}(n) \ltimes \mathbb R^n$, and it is convenient to work instead with the double cover $\mathrm{ISpin}(n) = \mathrm{Spin}(n) \ltimes \mathbb R^n$. I realize that these are not quite the standard names, but no matter; for example, you may replace the "I" in $\mathrm{SISO}$ with a "U", and the "O" with a "Y", if such changes make you feel better.
Now, suppose that you choose for yourself some real spin representation $\mathbb S$ of $\mathrm{Spin}(n)$ and a symmetric $\mathrm{Spin}(n)$-equivariant pairing $\Gamma: \mathbb S \otimes \mathbb S \to \mathbb R^n$. Exactly what flavor of choices this requires depends on the value of $n$ mod 8, and on the signature, and perhaps other things. As usual, "spin representation" means it extends to the appropriate clifford algebra.
Let $\pi \mathbb S$ denote the supervector space which is the "parity reversal" of $\mathbb S$. Then $\Gamma$ makes sense as an antisymmetric pairing on $\pi\mathbb S$. Indeed, it defines a nonabelian super Lie algebra structure on the supervector space $\pi\mathbb S \oplus \mathbb R^n$, whose only nontrivial bracket is $\Gamma : (\pi\mathbb S)^{\wedge 2} \to \mathbb R^n$. Lacking a good notation, I will call this Lie algebra $\mathfrak t$. It is a central extension of $\pi\mathbb S$ by $\mathbb R^n$, and fits into a nontrivial short exact sequence $\mathbb R^n \to \mathfrak t \to \pi\mathbb S$. Exponentiating of finite-dimensional super Lie algebras is trivial if the non-super part can be exponentiated, and so we end up with a nonabelian super translation group $T$, also given as a central extension, now of super groups, of $\pi \mathbb S$ by $\mathbb R^n$. By definition, everything is $\mathrm{Spin}(n)$-equivariant. The super isometry group is the extension $\mathrm{SISO}(n,\mathbb S) = \mathrm{Spin}(n) \ltimes T$.
My question is: What happens when flat space $\mathbb R^n$ is replaced by some other geometry? Simple cases include the round sphere, and de Sitter and anti de Sitter spaces. More complicated examples include other symmetric or homogeneous spaces for other Lie groups. Any "$G_2$ supersymmetry" or "$E_8$ supersymmetry" out there?
The motivation for my question comes from an observation that I learned from Dyson's excellent paper Birds and Frogs: $\mathrm{ISO}(n)$ is simply a limit as some "curvature" parameter goes to $\infty$ of $\mathrm{SO}(n+1)$, which is in the technical sense a more simple group. Note that there will no longer be a well-defined "super translation group", as the round sphere is not (usually) a group, but perhaps there is still be a simple deformation of $\mathrm{SISO}(n)$, acting on some super homogeneous space?
This post imported from StackExchange MathOverflow at 2015-01-08 14:16 (UTC), posted by SE-user Theo Johnson-Freyd