Hunt process

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

In probability theory, a Hunt process is a type of Markov process, named for mathematician Gilbert A. Hunt who first defined them in 1957. Hunt processes were important in the study of probabilistic potential theory until they were superseded by right processes in the 1970s.

History

Background

In the 1930-50s the work of mathematicians such as Joseph Doob, William Feller, Mark Kac, and Shizuo Kakutani developed connections between Markov processes and potential theory.[1]

In 1957-8 Gilbert A. Hunt published a triplet of papers[2][3][4] which deepened that connection. The impact of these papers on the probabilist community of the time was significant. Joseph Doob said that "Hunt’s great papers on the potential theory generated by Markov transition functions revolutionized potential theory."[5] Ronald Getoor described them as "a monumental work of nearly 170 pages that contained an enormous amount of truly original mathematics."[6] Gustave Choquet wrote that Hunt's papers were "fundamental memoirs which were renewing at the same time potential theory and the theory of Markov processes by establishing a precise link, in a very general framework, between an important class of Markov processes and the class of kernels in potential theory which French probabilists had just been studying."[7]

One of Hunt's contributions was to group together several properties that a Markov process should have in order to be studied via potential theory, which he called "hypothesis (A)". A stochastic process X satisfies hypothesis (A) if the following three assumptions hold:[2]

First assumption: X is a Markov process on a Polish space with càdlàg paths.
Second assumption: X satisfies the strong Markov property.
Third assumption: X is quasi-left continuous on [0,).

Processes satisfying hypothesis (A) soon became known as Hunt processes. If the third assumption is slightly weakened so that quasi-left continuity holds only on the lifetime of X, then X is called a "standard process", a term that was introduced by Eugene Dynkin.[8][9]

Rise and fall

The book "Markov Processes and Potential Theory"[10] (1968) by Blumenthal and Getoor codified standard and Hunt processes as the archetypal Markov processes.[11] Over the next few years probabilistic potential theory was concerned almost exclusively with these processes.

Of the three assumptions contained in Hunt's hypothesis (A), the most restrictive is quasi-left continuity. Getoor and Glover write: "In proving many of his results, Hunt assumed certain additional regularity hypotheses about his processes. ... It slowly became clear that it was necessary to remove many of these regularity hypotheses in order to advance the theory."[12] Already in the 1960s attempts were being made to assume quasi-left continuity only when necessary.[13]

In 1970, Chung-Tuo Shih extended two of Hunt's fundamental results,Template:Efn completely removing the need for left limits (and thus also quasi-left continuity).[14] This led to the definition of right processes as the new class of Markov processes for which potential theory could work.[15] Already in 1975, Getoor wrote that Hunt processes were "mainly of historical interest".[16] By the time that Michael Sharpe published his book "General Theory of Markov Processes" in 1988, Hunt and standard processes were considered obsolete in probabilistic potential theory.[15]

Hunt processes are still studied by mathematicians, most often in relation to Dirichlet forms.[17][18][19]

Definition

Brief definition

A Hunt process X is a strong Markov process on a Polish space that is càdlàg and quasi-left continuous; that is, if (Tn) is an increasing sequence of stopping times with limit T, then (limnXTn=XT|T<)=1.

Verbose definition

Let E be a Radon space and the σ-algebra of universally measurable subsets of E, and let (Pt) be a Markov semigroup on (E,) that preserves . A Hunt process is a collection X=(Ω,𝒢,𝒢t,Xt,θt,x) satisfying the following conditions:[20]

(i) (Ω,𝒢,𝒢t) is a filtered measurable space, and each x is a probability measure on (Ω,𝒢).
(ii) For every xE, Xt is an E-valued stochastic process on (Ω,𝒢,x), and is adapted to (𝒢t).
(iii) (normality) For every xE, x(X0=x)=1.
(iv) (Markov property) For every xE, and for all t,s0,fb, 𝔼x(f(Xt+s)|𝒢t)=Psf(Xt).
(v) (θt)t0 is a collection of maps :ΩΩ such that for each t,s0, θtθs=θt+s and Xtθs=Xt+s.
(vi) (𝒢t) is augmented and right continuous.
(vii) (right-continuity) For every xE, every α>0, and every α-excessive (with respect to (Pt)) function f, the map tf(Xt) is almost surely right continuous under x.
(viii) (quasi-left continuity) For every xE, if (Tn) is an increasing sequence of stopping times with limit T, then x(limnXTn=XT|T<)=1.

Sharpe[20] shows in Lemma 2.6 that conditions (i)-(v) imply measurability of the map xx(XtB) for all B, and in Theorem 7.4 that (vi)-(vii) imply the strong Markov property with respect to (𝒢t).

Connection to other Markov processes

The following inclusions hold among various classes of Markov process:[21][22]

{Lévy} {Itô} {Feller} {Hunt} {special standard} {standard} {right} {strong Markov}

Time-changed Itô processes

In 1980 Çinlar et al.[23] proved that any real-valued Hunt process is semimartingale if and only if it is a random time-change of an Itô process. More precisely,[24] a Hunt process X on m (equipped with the Borel σ-algebra) is a semimartingale if and only if there is an Itô process Y and a measurable function f with 0f1 such that Xt=YAt,t0, where At=0tf(Ys)ds. Itô processes were first named due to their role in this theorem,[25] though Itô had previously studied them.[26]

See also

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

Template:Reflist

Sources

Template:Refbegin

  • Blumenthal, Robert M. and Getoor, Ronald K. "Markov Processes and Potential Theory". Academic Press, New York, 1968.
  • Hunt, G. A. "Markoff Processes and Potentials. I, II, III.", Illinois J. Math. 1 (1957) 44–93; 1 (1957), 313–369; 2 (1958), 151–213.

Template:Refend

Template:Stochastic processes

  1. Blumenthal, Getoor (1968), vii
  2. 2.0 2.1 Template:Cite journal
  3. Template:Cite journal
  4. Template:Cite journal
  5. Template:Cite journal
  6. Template:Cite journal
  7. As quoted by Marc Yor in Template:Cite book
  8. Blumenthal, Getoor (1968), 296
  9. Template:Cite journal
  10. Template:Cite book
  11. "Ever since the publication of the book by Blumenthal and Getoor, standard processes have been the central class of Markov processes in probabilistic potential theory", p277, Template:Cite book
  12. Template:Cite journal
  13. Template:Citation
  14. Template:Cite journal
  15. 15.0 15.1 Template:Cite journal
  16. p56, Template:Cite book
  17. Template:Cite book
  18. Template:Citation
  19. Template:Citation
  20. 20.0 20.1 Template:Cite book
  21. p55, Template:Cite book
  22. p515, Template:Cite book
  23. Template:Cite journal
  24. Theorem 3.35, Template:Cite book
  25. p164-5, "Thus, the processes whose extended generators have the form (1.1) are of central importance among semimartingale Markov processes, and deserve a name of their own. We call them Itô processes." Template:Cite journal
  26. Template:Cite book