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Doob–Meyer decomposition theorem

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The Doob–Meyer decomposition theorem is a theorem in stochastic calculus stating the conditions under which a submartingale may be decomposed in a unique way as the sum of a martingale and an increasing predictable process. It is named for Joseph L. Doob and Paul-André Meyer.

History

In 1953, Doob published the Doob decomposition theorem which gives a unique decomposition for certain discrete time martingales. He conjectured a continuous time version of the theorem and in two publications in 1962 and 1963 Paul-André Meyer proved such a theorem, which became known as the Doob-Meyer decomposition. In honor of Doob, Meyer used the term "class D" to refer to the class of supermartingales for which his unique decomposition theorem applied.

Class D supermartingales

A càdlàg supermartingale Z {\displaystyle Z} is of Class D if Z 0 = 0 {\displaystyle Z_{0}=0} and the collection

{ Z T T  a finite-valued stopping time } {\displaystyle \{Z_{T}\mid T{\text{ a finite-valued stopping time}}\}}

is uniformly integrable.

The theorem

Let Z {\displaystyle Z} be a cadlag supermartingale of class D. Then there exists a unique, non-decreasing, predictable process A {\displaystyle A} with A 0 = 0 {\displaystyle A_{0}=0} such that M t = Z t + A t {\displaystyle M_{t}=Z_{t}+A_{t}} is a uniformly integrable martingale.

See also

Notes

  1. Doob 1953
  2. Meyer 1952
  3. Meyer 1963
  4. Protter 2005
  5. ^ Protter (2005)

References

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