Base flow (random dynamical systems)

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Template:Multiple issues In mathematics, the base flow of a random dynamical system is the dynamical system defined on the "noise" probability space that describes how to "fast forward" or "rewind" the noise when one wishes to change the time at which one "starts" the random dynamical system.

Definition

In the definition of a random dynamical system, one is given a family of maps ϑs:ΩΩ on a probability space (Ω,,). The measure-preserving dynamical system (Ω,,,ϑ) is known as the base flow of the random dynamical system. The maps ϑs are often known as shift maps since they "shift" time. The base flow is often ergodic.

The parameter s may be chosen to run over

  • (a two-sided continuous-time dynamical system);
  • [0,+) (a one-sided continuous-time dynamical system);
  • (a two-sided discrete-time dynamical system);
  • {0} (a one-sided discrete-time dynamical system).

Each map ϑs is required

  • to be a (,)-measurable function: for all E, ϑs1(E)
  • to preserve the measure : for all E, (ϑs1(E))=(E).

Furthermore, as a family, the maps ϑs satisfy the relations

  • ϑ0=idΩ:ΩΩ, the identity function on Ω;
  • ϑsϑt=ϑs+t for all s and t for which the three maps in this expression are defined. In particular, ϑs1=ϑs if s exists.

In other words, the maps ϑs form a commutative monoid (in the cases s{0} and s[0,+)) or a commutative group (in the cases s and s).

Example

In the case of random dynamical system driven by a Wiener process W:×ΩX, where (Ω,,) is the two-sided classical Wiener space, the base flow ϑs:ΩΩ would be given by

W(t,ϑs(ω))=W(t+s,ω)W(s,ω).

This can be read as saying that ϑs "starts the noise at time s instead of time 0".

References

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