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The structure of extremal processes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2016

Sidney I. Resnick
Affiliation:
Stanford University
Michael Rubinovitch
Affiliation:
Technion—Israel Institute of Technology

Abstract

An extremal-F process {Y (t); t ≧ 0} is defined as the continuous time analogue of sample sequences of maxima of i.i.d. r.v.'s distributed like F in the same way that processes with stationary independent increments (s.i.i.) are the continuous time analogue of sample sums of i.i.d. r.v.'s with an infinitely divisible distribution. Extremal-F processes are stochastically continuous Markov jump processes which traverse the interval of concentration of F. Most extremal processes of interest are broad sense equivalent to the largest positive jump of a suitable s.i.i. process and this together with known results from the theory of record values enables one to conclude that the number of jumps of Y (t) in (t1, t2] follows a Poisson distribution with parameter log t2/t1. The time transformation tet gives a new jump process whose jumps occur according to a homogeneous Poisson process of rate 1. This fact leads to information about the jump times and the inter-jump times. When F is an extreme value distribution the Y-process has special properties. The most important is that if F(x) = exp {—ex} then Y(t) has an additive structure. This structure plus non parametric techniques permit a variety of conclusions about the limiting behaviour of Y(t) and its jump times.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Applied Probability Trust 1973 

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