Gamma process

This article is about the stochastic process. For the astrophysical nucleosynthesis process, see Gamma process (astrophysics).

A gamma process is a random process with independent gamma distributed increments. Often written as , it is a pure-jump increasing Lévy process with intensity measure , for positive . Thus jumps whose size lies in the interval occur as a Poisson process with intensity The parameter controls the rate of jump arrivals and the scaling parameter inversely controls the jump size. It is assumed that the process starts from a value 0 at t=0.

The gamma process is sometimes also parameterised in terms of the mean () and variance () of the increase per unit time, which is equivalent to and .

Properties

Some basic properties of the gamma process are:

marginal distribution

The marginal distribution of a gamma process at time , is a gamma distribution with mean and variance

scaling
adding independent processes
moments
where is the Gamma function.
moment generating function
correlation
, for any gamma process

The gamma process is used as the distribution for random time change in the variance gamma process.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.