Does a continuous-time stochastic process satisfying this evolution equation have the Markov property?












1














It is well-known that, for a continuous-time Markov process, the transition probabilities $mathbf{P} = mathbb{P}left[X(t) = j |X(0) = iright]$ satisfy the following evolution equation:



$$frac{dmathbf{P}}{dt} = mathbf{A}{mathbf{P}}$$



where $mathbf{A}$ is a time-independent matrix usually called the generator matrix.



If I were to identify a stochastic process whose transition probabilities evolve according to this equation, would this immediately imply the process possesses the Markov property?










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  • No, because this says nothing about higher dimensional marginals of the process, for example, about whether $$P(X(2)in Bmid X(1),X(0))=P(X(2)in Bmid X(1))$$
    – Did
    2 days ago












  • Additional to @Did's comment, if you consider a stochastic differential equation for $X_t$: ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are, say, smooth functions, and $W_t$ denotes the Wiener process, then $X_t$ has the Markov property. However, this does not hold true if ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t,t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t,t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are time-dependent.
    – hypernova
    2 days ago
















1














It is well-known that, for a continuous-time Markov process, the transition probabilities $mathbf{P} = mathbb{P}left[X(t) = j |X(0) = iright]$ satisfy the following evolution equation:



$$frac{dmathbf{P}}{dt} = mathbf{A}{mathbf{P}}$$



where $mathbf{A}$ is a time-independent matrix usually called the generator matrix.



If I were to identify a stochastic process whose transition probabilities evolve according to this equation, would this immediately imply the process possesses the Markov property?










share|cite|improve this question
























  • No, because this says nothing about higher dimensional marginals of the process, for example, about whether $$P(X(2)in Bmid X(1),X(0))=P(X(2)in Bmid X(1))$$
    – Did
    2 days ago












  • Additional to @Did's comment, if you consider a stochastic differential equation for $X_t$: ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are, say, smooth functions, and $W_t$ denotes the Wiener process, then $X_t$ has the Markov property. However, this does not hold true if ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t,t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t,t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are time-dependent.
    – hypernova
    2 days ago














1












1








1


1





It is well-known that, for a continuous-time Markov process, the transition probabilities $mathbf{P} = mathbb{P}left[X(t) = j |X(0) = iright]$ satisfy the following evolution equation:



$$frac{dmathbf{P}}{dt} = mathbf{A}{mathbf{P}}$$



where $mathbf{A}$ is a time-independent matrix usually called the generator matrix.



If I were to identify a stochastic process whose transition probabilities evolve according to this equation, would this immediately imply the process possesses the Markov property?










share|cite|improve this question















It is well-known that, for a continuous-time Markov process, the transition probabilities $mathbf{P} = mathbb{P}left[X(t) = j |X(0) = iright]$ satisfy the following evolution equation:



$$frac{dmathbf{P}}{dt} = mathbf{A}{mathbf{P}}$$



where $mathbf{A}$ is a time-independent matrix usually called the generator matrix.



If I were to identify a stochastic process whose transition probabilities evolve according to this equation, would this immediately imply the process possesses the Markov property?







probability stochastic-processes markov-process






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share|cite|improve this question













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edited 2 days ago







aghostinthefigures

















asked Jan 4 at 22:41









aghostinthefiguresaghostinthefigures

1,2301216




1,2301216












  • No, because this says nothing about higher dimensional marginals of the process, for example, about whether $$P(X(2)in Bmid X(1),X(0))=P(X(2)in Bmid X(1))$$
    – Did
    2 days ago












  • Additional to @Did's comment, if you consider a stochastic differential equation for $X_t$: ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are, say, smooth functions, and $W_t$ denotes the Wiener process, then $X_t$ has the Markov property. However, this does not hold true if ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t,t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t,t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are time-dependent.
    – hypernova
    2 days ago


















  • No, because this says nothing about higher dimensional marginals of the process, for example, about whether $$P(X(2)in Bmid X(1),X(0))=P(X(2)in Bmid X(1))$$
    – Did
    2 days ago












  • Additional to @Did's comment, if you consider a stochastic differential equation for $X_t$: ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are, say, smooth functions, and $W_t$ denotes the Wiener process, then $X_t$ has the Markov property. However, this does not hold true if ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t,t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t,t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are time-dependent.
    – hypernova
    2 days ago
















No, because this says nothing about higher dimensional marginals of the process, for example, about whether $$P(X(2)in Bmid X(1),X(0))=P(X(2)in Bmid X(1))$$
– Did
2 days ago






No, because this says nothing about higher dimensional marginals of the process, for example, about whether $$P(X(2)in Bmid X(1),X(0))=P(X(2)in Bmid X(1))$$
– Did
2 days ago














Additional to @Did's comment, if you consider a stochastic differential equation for $X_t$: ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are, say, smooth functions, and $W_t$ denotes the Wiener process, then $X_t$ has the Markov property. However, this does not hold true if ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t,t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t,t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are time-dependent.
– hypernova
2 days ago




Additional to @Did's comment, if you consider a stochastic differential equation for $X_t$: ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are, say, smooth functions, and $W_t$ denotes the Wiener process, then $X_t$ has the Markov property. However, this does not hold true if ${rm d}X_t=b(X_t,t),{rm d}t+sigma(X_t,t),{rm d}W_t$, where $b$ and $sigma$ are time-dependent.
– hypernova
2 days ago










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