A remark on the heat equation with a point perturbation, the Feynman-Kac formula with local time and derivative pricing (Q2349735): Difference between revisions
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Property / author: Sergio A. Albeverio / rank | |||
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Property / author: Silvestro Fassari / rank | |||
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Property / author: Fabio Rinaldi / rank | |||
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Property / reviewed by: Rene L. Schilling / rank | |||
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Revision as of 21:16, 10 February 2024
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English | A remark on the heat equation with a point perturbation, the Feynman-Kac formula with local time and derivative pricing |
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A remark on the heat equation with a point perturbation, the Feynman-Kac formula with local time and derivative pricing (English)
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17 June 2015
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This note contains an interpretation of results by \textit{S. Fassari} and \textit{F. Rinaldi} [Rend. Mat. Appl., VII. Ser. 31, No. 1--2, 35--52 (2011; Zbl 1247.35177)]. The authors study the self-adjoint operator \[ \frac 12\sigma^2H_\lambda := \frac 12\sigma^2[-\frac{d^2}{dx^2}+\lambda\delta(x)] \] and give an interpretation of the fundamental solution in terms of stochastic processes and a Feynman-Kac formula. The latter can explicitly be written in terms of a measure which is absolutely continuous with respect to the standard Wiener measure and the Radon-Nikodým derivative is given by \(\exp[-\frac 12\lambda L_{(t,0)}(x+X)]\), where \(L\) denotes the local time of Brownian motion at zero. Some applications to mathematical finance (classical Black-Scholes options vs.\ knock-out options) are included and it is shown that the present model `interpolates' these two extremes (corresponding to \(\lambda=0\) and \(\lambda=\infty\), respectively).
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point interactions
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heat equation
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heat kernel
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Feynman-Kac formula
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Brownian motion
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local time
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option pricing
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Black-Scholes equation
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