Building on work on Miura's transformation by Kappeler, Perry, Shubin, and
Topalov, we develop a detailed spectral theoretic treatment of Schr\"odinger
operators with matrix-valued potentials, with special emphasis on
distributional potential coefficients.
Our principal method relies on a supersymmetric (factorization) formalism
underlying Miura's transformation, which intimately connects the triple of
operators (D,H1,H2) of the form [D= (0 & A^*, A & 0) \text{in}
L^2(\mathbb{R})^{2m} \text{and} H_1 = A^* A, H_2 = A A^* \text{in}
L^2(\mathbb{R})^m.] Here A=Im(d/dx)+ϕ in L2(R)m, with a
matrix-valued coefficient ϕ=ϕ∗∈Lloc1(R)m×m, m∈N, thus explicitly permitting distributional
potential coefficients Vj in Hj, j=1,2, where [H_j = - I_m
\frac{d^2}{dx^2} + V_j(x), \quad V_j(x) = \phi(x)^2 + (-1)^{j} \phi'(x),
j=1,2.] Upon developing Weyl--Titchmarsh theory for these generalized
Schr\"odinger operators Hj, with (possibly, distributional) matrix-valued
potentials Vj, we provide some spectral theoretic applications, including a
derivation of the corresponding spectral representations for Hj, j=1,2.
Finally, we derive a local Borg--Marchenko uniqueness theorem for Hj,
j=1,2, by employing the underlying supersymmetric structure and reducing it
to the known local Borg--Marchenko uniqueness theorem for D.Comment: 36 page