Gauss–Markov process
Appearance
Gauss–Markov stochastic processes (named after Carl Friedrich Gauss and Andrey Markov) are stochastic processes that satisfy the requirements for both Gaussian processes and Markov processes.
Every Gauss-Markov process X(t) possesses the three following properties:
- If h(t) is a non-zero scalar function of t, then Z(t) = h(t)X(t) is also a Gauss-Markov process
- If f(t) is a non-decreasing scalar function of t, then Z(t) = X(f(t)) is also a Gauss-Markov process
- There exists a non-zero scalar function h(t) and a non-decreasing scalar function f(t) such that X(t) = h(t)W(f(t)), where W(t) is the standard Wiener process.
Property (3) means that every Gauss–Markov process can be synthesized from the standard Wiener process (SWP).
Properties
A stationary Gauss–Markov process with variance and time constant has the following properties.
Exponential autocorrelation:
(Power) spectral density function:
The above yields the following spectral factorisation: