Implicit renewal theory and tails of solutions of random equations (Q758004): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 22:01, 19 March 2024
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English | Implicit renewal theory and tails of solutions of random equations |
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Implicit renewal theory and tails of solutions of random equations (English)
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1991
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Let \(\Psi\) be a random element of the space of Borel-measurable functions from \({\mathbb{R}}\) to \({\mathbb{R}}\). Let R be a random variable independent of \(\Psi\). The author treats the random equation \(R=\Psi \circ R\) where the equality denotes equality in probability law. After setting out this implicit renewal theory with corresponding rate results, more special equations are tackled. For example (i) \(\Psi (t)=Q+MT\), where Q and M are random and where a one-dimensional version of a result by \textit{H. Kesten} [Acta Math. 131, 207-248 (1973; Zbl 0291.60029)] receives a new and simpler treatment; (ii) \(\Psi (t)=Q+M \max (L,t)\), where \(M\geq 0\) a.s. and treated by \textit{G. Letac} [Random matrices and their applications, Proc. AMS-IMS-SIAM Joint Summer Res. Conf., Brunswick/Maine 1984, Contemp. Math. 50, 263-273 (1986; Zbl 0587.60057)]; (iii) \(\Psi (t)=\max (Q,Mt)\) with applications on the G/G/1-queue. Other examples are scattered throughout the paper. Proofs are gathered in a separate section, and show how classical renewal theory can be beautifully exploited to attack the more complicated implicit renewal theory. The paper ends with a discussion of the implications for extreme- value theory and an illustration from economics.
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random equations
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additive Markov process queues
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renewal theory
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