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Recurrence and first passage times

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

M. S. Bartlett
Affiliation:
University of Manchester

Extract

The theoretical problem of the probable time of recurrence of a given state of a physical system which changes according to a specified random or stochastic process is in general not a very tractable one, but many situations are covered by the more particular methods and formulae given in this paper. Several of these are believed new, but others are also included for reference. We shall usually limit our attention to homogeneous processes, i.e. the transition probabilities do not depend explicitly on the time. Even so, a generally useful solution of the complete distributional problem of recurrence times would appear rather unlikely; for example, it would have to include as a special case the recurrence theory for trigonometrical or power series, problems of some complexity which have separately engaged the attention of mathematicians (see, for example, Kac (7)). Thus a manageable simplification of the complete distributional problem emerges only in particular but important classes of physical problems classifiable theoretically as Markoff processes or, somewhat more generally, as ‘renewal’ processes (cf. Feller (4)). In other cases, if we are content with mean values (which do not always exist), and are dealing with stationary processes with complete ergodic properties, such as a statistical mechanical system in equilibrium, the simple but powerful arguments originally used by Smoluchowski (11) are available. We first formulate the probability problem in symbolic terms, being more concerned in this paper with general structural relations than with special points of rigour, or specific applications.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge Philosophical Society 1953

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References

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