Skorokhod problem

In probability theory, the Skorokhod problem is the problem of solving a stochastic differential equation with a reflecting boundary condition.

The problem is named after Anatoliy Skorokhod who first published the solution to a stochastic differential equation for a reflecting Brownian motion.

Problem statement

The classic version of the problem states that given a càdlàg process {X(t), t ≥ 0} and an M-matrix R, then stochastic processes {W(t), t ≥ 0} and {Z(t), t ≥ 0} are said to solve the Skorokhod problem if for all non-negative t values,

  1. W(t) = X(t) + R Z(t) ≥ 0
  2. Z(0) = 0 and dZ(t) ≥ 0
  3. .

The matrix R is often known as the reflection matrix, W(t) as the reflected process and Z(t) as the regulator process.

See also

References


Uses material from the Wikipedia article Skorokhod problem, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.