A theory of $L^1$-dissipative solvers for scalar conservation laws with discontinuous flux
Boris Andreianov, Kenneth H. Karlsen, Nils Henrik Risebro

TL;DR
This paper develops a unified framework for analyzing $L^1$-dissipative solutions to scalar conservation laws with discontinuous flux, introducing the concept of germs to characterize admissibility and entropy conditions.
Contribution
It introduces the germ-based approach to unify and extend entropy conditions for conservation laws with discontinuous flux, enabling weaker assumptions and new existence results.
Findings
Characterization of germs that ensure $L^1$-contraction.
Recovery of earlier uniqueness results under weaker conditions.
Existence proofs using vanishing viscosity and germ-adapted schemes.
Abstract
We propose a general framework for the study of contractive semigroups of solutions to conservation laws with discontinuous flux. Developing the ideas of a number of preceding works we claim that the whole admissibility issue is reduced to the selection of a family of "elementary solutions", which are certain piecewise constant stationary weak solutions. We refer to such a family as a "germ". It is well known that (CL) admits many different contractive semigroups, some of which reflects different physical applications. We revisit a number of the existing admissibility (or entropy) conditions and identify the germs that underly these conditions. We devote specific attention to the anishing viscosity" germ, which is a way to express the "-condition" of Diehl. For any given germ, we formulate "germ-based" admissibility conditions in the form of a trace condition on the…
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