scholarly journals Local asymptotic self-similarity for heavy-tailed harmonizable fractional Lévy motions

Author(s):  
Andreas Basse-O’Connor ◽  
Thorbjørn Grønbæk ◽  
Mark Podolskij

In this work we characterize the local asymptotic self-similarity of harmonizable fractional Levy motions in the heavy tailed case. The corresponding tangent process is shown to be the harmonizable fractional stable motion. In addition, we provide sufficient conditions for existence of harmonizable fractional Levy motions.

2004 ◽  
Vol 36 (04) ◽  
pp. 1085-1115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stilian Stoev ◽  
Murad S. Taqqu

We study a family of locally self-similar stochastic processes Y = {Y(t)} t∈ℝ with α-stable distributions, called linear multifractional stable motions. They have infinite variance and may possess skewed distributions. The linear multifractional stable motion processes include, in particular, the classical linear fractional stable motion processes, which have stationary increments and are self-similar with self-similarity parameter H. The linear multifractional stable motion process Y is obtained by replacing the self-similarity parameter H in the integral representation of the linear fractional stable motion process by a deterministic function H(t). Whereas the linear fractional stable motion is always continuous in probability, this is not in general the case for Y. We obtain necessary and sufficient conditions for the continuity in probability of the process Y. We also examine the effect of the regularity of the function H(t) on the local structure of the process. We show that under certain Hölder regularity conditions on the function H(t), the process Y is locally equivalent to a linear fractional stable motion process, in the sense of finite-dimensional distributions. We study Y by using a related α-stable random field and its partial derivatives.


2004 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 1085-1115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stilian Stoev ◽  
Murad S. Taqqu

We study a family of locally self-similar stochastic processes Y = {Y(t)}t∈ℝ with α-stable distributions, called linear multifractional stable motions. They have infinite variance and may possess skewed distributions. The linear multifractional stable motion processes include, in particular, the classical linear fractional stable motion processes, which have stationary increments and are self-similar with self-similarity parameter H. The linear multifractional stable motion process Y is obtained by replacing the self-similarity parameter H in the integral representation of the linear fractional stable motion process by a deterministic function H(t). Whereas the linear fractional stable motion is always continuous in probability, this is not in general the case for Y. We obtain necessary and sufficient conditions for the continuity in probability of the process Y. We also examine the effect of the regularity of the function H(t) on the local structure of the process. We show that under certain Hölder regularity conditions on the function H(t), the process Y is locally equivalent to a linear fractional stable motion process, in the sense of finite-dimensional distributions. We study Y by using a related α-stable random field and its partial derivatives.


Fractals ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 13 (02) ◽  
pp. 157-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
STILIAN STOEV ◽  
MURAD S. TAQQU

The linear multifractional stable motion (LMSM) processes Y = {Y(t)}t∈ℝ is an α-stable (0 < α < 2) stochastic process, which exhibits local self-similarity, has heavy tails and can have skewed distributions. The process Y is obtained from the well-known class of linear fractional stable motion (LFSM) processes by replacing their self-similarity parameter H by a function of time H(t). We show that the paths of Y(t) are bounded on bounded intervals only if 1/α ≤ H(t) < 1, t ∈ ℝ. In particular, if 0 < α ≤ 1, then Y has everywhere discontinuous paths, with probability one. On the other hand, Y has a version with continuous paths if H(t) is sufficiently regular and 1/α < H(t), t ∈ ℝ. We study the Hölder regularity of the sample paths when these are continuous and establish almost sure bounds on the pointwise and uniform pointwise Hölder exponents of the (random) function Y(t,ω), t ∈ ℝ, in terms of the function H(t) and its corresponding Hölder exponents. The Gaussian multifractional Brownian motion (MBM) processes are LMSM processes when α = 2. We obtain some new results on the Hölder regularity of their paths.


Fractals ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 17 (02) ◽  
pp. 217-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
MOHAMMAD MOHAMMADI ◽  
ADEL MOHAMMADPOUR

Stoev and Taqqu1 presented a fast simulation method for the linear fractional stable motion (lfsm) process, using the fast Fourier transform. In this paper, we extend this method for fast simulation of the log-fractional stable motion (log-fsm) process. These two heavy-tailed processes, i.e. lfsm and log-fsm, can be used for modeling the modern telecommunication networks. In addition, a necessary and sufficient condition is given for the efficiency of this method. Finally, an upper bound for approximation error is presented.


2012 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Siena ◽  
A. Guadagnini ◽  
M. Riva ◽  
S. P. Neuman

Abstract. We use three methods to identify power-law scaling of multi-scale log air permeability data collected by Tidwell and Wilson on the faces of a laboratory-scale block of Topopah Spring tuff: method of moments (M), Extended Self-Similarity (ESS) and a generalized version thereof (G-ESS). All three methods focus on q-th-order sample structure functions of absolute increments. Most such functions exhibit power-law scaling at best over a limited midrange of experimental separation scales, or lags, which are sometimes difficult to identify unambiguously by means of M. ESS and G-ESS extend this range in a way that renders power-law scaling easier to characterize. Our analysis confirms the superiority of ESS and G-ESS over M in identifying the scaling exponents, ξ(q), of corresponding structure functions of orders q, suggesting further that ESS is more reliable than G-ESS. The exponents vary in a nonlinear fashion with q as is typical of real or apparent multifractals. Our estimates of the Hurst scaling coefficient increase with support scale, implying a reduction in roughness (anti-persistence) of the log permeability field with measurement volume. The finding by Tidwell and Wilson that log permeabilities associated with all tip sizes can be characterized by stationary variogram models, coupled with our findings that log permeability increments associated with the smallest tip size are approximately Gaussian and those associated with all tip sizes scale show nonlinear variations in ξ(q) with q, are consistent with a view of these data as a sample from a truncated version (tfBm) of self-affine fractional Brownian motion (fBm). Since in theory the scaling exponents, ξ(q), of tfBm vary linearly with q we conclude that nonlinear scaling in our case is not an indication of multifractality but an artifact of sampling from tfBm. This allows us to explain theoretically how power-law scaling of our data, as well as of non-Gaussian heavy-tailed signals subordinated to tfBm, are extended by ESS. It further allows us to identify the functional form and estimate all parameters of the corresponding tfBm based on sample structure functions of first and second orders.


2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (09) ◽  
pp. 1650049 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Wei ◽  
Hong Zhang ◽  
Zhenya Wu ◽  
Junlin He ◽  
Yangyong Guo

For the evacuation dynamics in indoor space, a novel crowd flow model is put forward based on Linear Fractional Stable Motion. Based on position attraction and queuing time, the calculation formula of movement probability is defined and the queuing time is depicted according to linear fractal stable movement. At last, an experiment and simulation platform can be used for performance analysis, studying deeply the relation among system evacuation time, crowd density and exit flow rate. It is concluded that the evacuation time and the exit flow rate have positive correlations with the crowd density, and when the exit width reaches to the threshold value, it will not effectively decrease the evacuation time by further increasing the exit width.


Fractals ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (02) ◽  
pp. 1750021
Author(s):  
R. K. ASWATHY ◽  
SUNIL MATHEW

Self-similarity is a common tendency in nature and physics. It is wide spread in geo-physical phenomena like diffusion and iteration. Physically, an object is self-similar if it is invariant under a set of scaling transformation. This paper gives a brief outline of the analytical and set theoretical properties of different types of weak self-similar sets. It is proved that weak sub self-similar sets are closed under finite union. Weak sub self-similar property of the topological boundary of a weak self-similar set is also discussed. The denseness of non-weak super self-similar sets in the set of all non-empty compact subsets of a separable complete metric space is established. It is proved that the power of weak self-similar sets are weak super self-similar in the product metric and weak self-similarity is preserved under isometry. A characterization of weak super self-similar sets using weak sub contractions is also presented. Exact weak sub and super self-similar sets are introduced in this paper and some necessary and sufficient conditions in terms of weak condensation IFS are presented. A condition for a set to be both exact weak super and sub self-similar is obtained and the denseness of exact weak super self similar sets in the set of all weak self-similar sets is discussed.


2009 ◽  
Vol 46 (04) ◽  
pp. 1038-1051 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rudolf Grübel ◽  
Paweł Hitczenko

Let (X i ) i∈ℕ be a sequence of independent and identically distributed random variables with values in the set ℕ0 of nonnegative integers. Motivated by applications in enumerative combinatorics and analysis of algorithms we investigate the number of gaps and the length of the longest gap in the set {X 1,…,X n } of the first n values. We obtain necessary and sufficient conditions in terms of the tail sequence (q k ) k∈ℕ0 , q k =P(X 1≥ k), for the gaps to vanish asymptotically as n→∞: these are ∑ k=0 ∞ q k+1/q k &lt;∞ and limk→∞ q k+1/q k =0 for convergence almost surely and convergence in probability, respectively. We further show that the length of the longest gap tends to ∞ in probability if q k+1/q k → 1. For the family of geometric distributions, which can be regarded as the borderline case between the light-tailed and the heavy-tailed situations and which is also of particular interest in applications, we study the distribution of the length of the longest gap, using a construction based on the Sukhatme–Rényi representation of exponential order statistics to resolve the asymptotic distributional periodicities.


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