Shocks Make the Riemann Problem for the Full Euler System in Multiple Space Dimensions Ill-posed
Abstract
The question of (non-)uniqueness of one-dimensional self-similar solutions to the Riemann problem for hyperbolic systems of gas dynamics in sets of multi-dimensional admissible weak solutions was addressed in recent years in several papers culminating in [17] with the proof that the Riemann problem for the isentropic Euler system with a power law pressure is ill-posed if the one-dimensional self-similar solution contains a shock. Natural question then arises whether the same holds also for a more involved system of equations, the full Euler system. After the first step in this direction was made in [1], where the ill-posedness was proved in the case of two shocks appearing in the self-similar solution, we prove in this paper that the presence of just one shock in the self-similar solution implies the same outcome, i.e. the existence of infinitely many admissible weak solutions to the multi-dimensional problem.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1912.13074,
title = {Shocks Make the Riemann Problem for the Full Euler System in Multiple Space Dimensions Ill-posed},
author = {Christian Klingenberg and Ondřej Kreml and Václav Mácha and Simon Markfelder},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1912.13074},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
21 pages, 3 figures