Domain walls in 1+2 dimensions are studied to clarify some general features
of topological-charge anomalies in supersymmetric theories, by extensive use of
a superfield supercurrent. For domain walls quantum modifications of the
supercharge algebra arise not only from the short-distance anomaly but also
from another source of long-distance origin, induced spin in the domain-wall
background, and the latter dominates in the sum. A close look into the
supersymmetric trace identity, which naturally accommodates the central-charge
anomaly and its superpartners, shows an interesting consequence of the
improvement of the supercurrent: Via an improvement the anomaly in the central
charge can be transferred from induced spin in the fermion sector to an induced
potential in the boson sector. This fact reveals a dual character, both
fermionic and bosonic, of the central-charge anomaly, which reflects the
underlying supersymmetry. The one-loop superfield effective action is also
constructed to verify the anomaly and BPS saturation of the domain-wall
spectrum.Comment: 8 pages, Revte