Consider the first-order Hamilton-Jacobi equation (HJ):
$$H(x,u,\nabla u) = 0 \quad \text{ on } \ \Omega,$$ where $\Omega$ is an open set of $\mathbb{R}^n$, $u:\Omega \to \mathbb{R}$, and $H:\Omega \times \mathbb{R} \times \mathbb{R}^n \to \mathbb{R}$ (Hamiltonian) is continuous.
Definition 1 (Crandall-Lions-Evans): We say that $u \in C(\Omega)$ is a viscosity solution of (HJ) iff, $\forall \phi \in C^1(\Omega)$,
$\forall x_0$ point of local maximum of $u-\phi$, $\ H(x_0, u(x_0), \nabla\phi(x_0)) \le 0$;
$\forall x_0$ point of local minimum of $u-\phi$, $\ H(x_0, u(x_0), \nabla\phi(x_0)) \ge 0$.
Q1: Where can I find a detailed proof that we can replace
- "local maximum" by "strict local maximum" or "global maximum" or "strict global maximum";
- "local minimum" by "strict local minimum" or "global minimum" or "strict global minimum"
and obtain an equivalent definition? (Or anyway how would that proof go?)
Q2: Is it true that we can replace $C^1$ by $C^k$ or $C^k_{\text{comp}}$, with $1 < k \le \infty$, and obtain an equivalent definition?