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2 - Martingales, stopping times and random measures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

David Applebaum
Affiliation:
Nottingham Trent University
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Summary

Summary We begin by introducing the important concepts of filtration, martingale and stopping time. These are then applied to establish the strong Markov property for Lévy processes and to prove that every Lévy process has a càdlàg modification. We then meet random measures, particularly those of Poisson type, and the associated Poisson integrals, which track the jumps of a Lévy process. The most important result of this chapter is the Lévy–Itôo decomposition of a Lévy process into a Brownian motion with drift (the continuous part), a Poisson integral (the large jumps) and a compensated Poisson integral (the small jumps). As a corollary, we complete the proof of the Lévy–Khintchine formula. Finally, we establish the interlacing construction, whereby a Lévy process is obtained as the almost-sure limit of a sequence of Brownian motions with drift wherein random jump discontinuities are inserted at random times.

In this chapter we will frequently encounter stochastic processes with càdlàg paths (i.e. paths that are continuous on the right and always have limits on the left). Readers requiring background knowledge in this area should consult the appendix at the end of the chapter.

Before you start reading this chapter, be aware that parts of it are quite technical. If you are mainly interested in applications, feel free to skim it, taking note of the results of the main theorems without worrying too much about the proofs.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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