Klein--Gordon oscillator with linear--fractional deformed Casimirs in doubly special relativity

Abstract

We study the Klein--Gordon (KG) oscillator in a doubly special relativity (DSR) framework, where the mass-shell condition is deformed through a linear--fractional (M\"obius-type) modification of the Casimir invariant. This is induced by a nonlinear map from physical momenta pμ to auxiliary Lorentz-covariant variables πμ. In (1+1) dimensions, the deformation is controlled by a constant covector aμ, yielding inequivalent realizations depending on whether aμ is timelike, spacelike, or lightlike. Implementing the KG oscillator via a reverted-product nonminimal coupling, we obtain exact closed-form spectra and explicit eigensolutions for both particle and antiparticle branches across all three geometries. Timelike and lightlike deformations produce identical spectra characterized by a Planck-suppressed additive displacement. This breaks the exact E -E symmetry via a term linear in E, interpretable as a branch-independent reparametrization of the energy origin. Conversely, the spacelike deformation is strictly isospectral to the undeformed oscillator but generates complex-shifted wavefunctions and a non-Hermitian spatial operator. We provide a compact PT-symmetric and pseudo-Hermitian formulation by constructing an explicit similarity map S to a Hermitian oscillator, deriving the metric operator η=S S, and establishing biorthonormal relations. Finally, we compare quantitatively with the Magueijo--Smolin (DSR2) model: the squared-denominator invariant leads to a larger Planck-suppressed displacement at fixed m/EPl, highlighting the denominator power's role in controlling spectral shifts. Representative plots illustrate the dependence on deformation ratio, oscillator strength, and excitation level.

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