Poisson random measure

From HandWiki

Let (E,𝒜,μ) be some measure space with σ-finite measure μ. The Poisson random measure with intensity measure μ is a family of random variables {NA}A𝒜 defined on some probability space (Ω,,P) such that i) A𝒜,NA is a Poisson random variable with rate μ(A).

ii) If sets A1,A2,,An𝒜 don't intersect then the corresponding random variables from i) are mutually independent.

iii) ωΩN(ω) is a measure on (E,𝒜)

Existence

If μ0 then N0 satisfies the conditions i)–iii). Otherwise, in the case of finite measure μ, given Z, a Poisson random variable with rate μ(E), and X1,X2,, mutually independent random variables with distribution μμ(E), define N(ω)=i=1Z(ω)δXi(ω)() where δc(A) is a degenerate measure located in c. Then N will be a Poisson random measure. In the case μ is not finite the measure N can be obtained from the measures constructed above on parts of E where μ is finite.

Applications

This kind of random measure is often used when describing jumps of stochastic processes, in particular in Lévy–Itō decomposition of the Lévy processes.

Generalizations

The Poisson random measure generalizes to the Poisson-type random measures, where members of the PT family are invariant under restriction to a subspace.

References

  • Sato, K. (2010). Lévy Processes and Infinitely Divisible Distributions. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-55302-5.