Separable process
A stochastic process such that the behaviour of its trajectories is essentially determined by their behaviour on a countable subset. A real stochastic process defined on a complete probability space , where is a subset of the real line , is separable relative to a class of subsets of if there are a countable set (the separant) and a set , , such that for any and for any open interval one has
Here stands for the intersection .
The concepts of separability relative to the class of closed sets and relative to the class of closed intervals are most important (in the latter case the process is simply called separable). If a process is separable, then for any and any open set ,
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
Each of the properties (1)–(4) is equivalent to separability. If is a left limit point of , then there is a sequence of points of such that
with probability 1 (similarly for right limit points). If is a separable stochastic process that is continuous in probability, then every countable everywhere-dense set is a separant; in addition, for any open interval , , and any sequence of finite subsets of satisfying the condition , one has
(5) |
in probability. The convergence in (5) can be replaced by convergence with probability 1 if is continuous with probability 1.
For any stochastic process , , there is a process , , on the same probability space that is separable relative to the class of closed sets, takes values in the extended real line and is such that , . The concept of separability and its properties can be generalized to processes for which and the range of values are different general topological spaces. The transition to a separable process enables one to assert the measurability of a number of important functionals and sets connected with a process. An alternative approach consists in extending the -algebra on which it is defined (for example, in the case of a product of Hausdorff compacta, a measure can be uniquely extended from the usual -algebra generated by cylindrical sets to the very rich -algebra of Borel sets), rather than in replacing the random variables constituting the process.
References
[1] | J.L. Doob, "Stochastic processes" , Chapman & Hall (1953) |
[2] | M. Loève, "Probability theory" , Princeton Univ. Press (1963) |
[3] | I.I. [I.I. Gikhman] Gihman, A.V. [A.V. Skorokhod] Skorohod, "The theory of stochastic processes" , 1 , Springer (1971) (Translated from Russian) |
[4] | J.L. Doob, "Probability in function space" Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. , 53 : 1 (1947) pp. 15–30 |
[5] | E. Nelson, "Regular probability measures on function space" Ann. of Math. , 69 : 3 (1959) pp. 630–643 |
Separable process. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Separable_process&oldid=23652