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arXiv:1205.2413 [math.PR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Diffusions of Multiplicative Cascades

Tom Alberts, Ben Rifkind

Published 2012-05-11, updated 2013-05-26Version 2

A multiplicative cascade can be thought of as a randomization of a measure on the boundary of a tree, constructed from an iid collection of random variables attached to the tree vertices. Given an initial measure with certain regularity properties, we construct a continuous time, measure-valued process whose value at each time is a cascade of the initial one. We do this by replacing the random variables on the vertices with independent increment processes satisfying certain moment assumptions. Our process has a Markov property: at any given time it is a cascade of the process at any earlier time by random variables that are independent of the past. It has the further advantage of being a martingale and, under certain extra conditions, it is also continuous. We discuss applications of this process to models of tree polymers and one-dimensional random geometry.

Comments: 30 pages; added section on Holder continuity
Categories: math.PR
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