Abstract

A prominent model for transportation networks is branched transport, which seeks the optimal transportation scheme to move material from a given initial to a given final distribution. The cost of the scheme encodes a higher transport efficiency the more mass is moved together, which automatically leads to optimal transportation networks with a hierarchical branching structure. The two major existing model formulations use either mass fluxes (vector-valued measures, Eulerian formulation) or patterns (probabilities on the space of particle paths, Lagrangian formulation). In the branched transport problem the transportation cost is a fractional power of the transported mass. In this paper we instead analyse the much more general class of transport problems in which the transportation cost is merely a nonnegative increasing and subadditive function (in a certain sense this is the broadest possible generalization of branched transport). In particular, we address the problem of the equivalence of the above-mentioned formulations in this wider context. However, the newly-introduced class of transportation costs lacks strict concavity which complicates the analysis considerably. New ideas are required, in particular, it turns out convenient to state the problem via 1-currents. Our analysis also includes the well-posedness, some network properties, as well as a metrization and a length space property of the model cost, which were previously only known for branched transport. Some already existing arguments in that field are given a more concise and simpler form.

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