Sample-continuous process

In mathematics, a sample-continuous process is a stochastic process whose sample paths are almost surely continuous functions.

Definition

Let (Ω, Σ, P) be a probability space. Let X : I × Ω → S be a stochastic process, where the index set I and state space S are both topological spaces. Then the process X is called sample-continuous (or almost surely continuous, or simply continuous) if the map X(ω) : I → S is continuous as a function of topological spaces for P-almost all ω in Ω.

In many examples, the index set I is an interval of time, or [0, +∞), and the state space S is the real line or n-dimensional Euclidean space Rn.

Examples

{ X t ∼ U n i f ( { X t − 1 − 1 , X t − 1 + 1 } ) , t  an integer; X t = X ⌊ t ⌋ , t  not an integer; {\displaystyle {\begin{cases}X_{t}\sim \mathrm {Unif} (\{X_{t-1}-1,X_{t-1}+1\}),&t{\mbox{ an integer;}}\\X_{t}=X_{\lfloor t\rfloor },&t{\mbox{ not an integer;}}\end{cases}}} is not sample-continuous. In fact, it is surely discontinuous.

Properties

See also

References