- Cameron-Martin theorem
In
mathematics , the Cameron-Martin theorem or Cameron-Martin formula is atheorem ofmeasure theory that describes how abstract Wiener measure changes under translation by certain elements of the Cameron-MartinHilbert space .Motivation
Recall that standard
Gaussian measure "γ""n" on "n"-dimensionalEuclidean space R"n" is not translation-invariant, but does satisfy the relation:
where the
derivative on the left-hand side is theRadon-Nikodym derivative , and ("T""h")∗("γ""n") is the push forward of the standard Gaussian measure "γ""n" by the translation map "T""h" : R"n" → R"n", "T""h"("x") = "x" + "h".Abstract Wiener measure "γ" on a separable
Banach space "E", where "i" : "H" → "E" is anabstract Wiener space , is also a "Gaussian measure" in a suitable sense. How does it change under translation? It turns out that a similar formula to the one above holds if we consider only translations by elements of thedense subspace "i"("H") ⊆ "E".tatement of the theorem
Let "i" : "H" → "E" be an abstract Wiener space with abstract Wiener measure "γ" : Borel("E") → [0, 1] . For "h" ∈ "H", define "T""h" : "E" → "E" by "T""h"("x") = "x" + "i"("h"). Then ("T""h")∗("γ") is equivalent to "γ" with Radon-Nikodym derivative
:
where
:
denotes the
Paley-Wiener integral .It is important to note that the Cameron-Martin formula is only valid for translations by elements of the dense subspace "i"("H") ⊆ "E", and not by arbitrary elements of "E". If the Cameron-Martin formula did hold for arbitrary translations, it would contradict the following result:
:If "E" is a separable Banach space and "μ" is a locally finite
Borel measure on "E" that is equivalent to its own push forward under any translation, then either "E" has finite dimension or "μ" is the trivial (zero) measure. (Seequasi-invariant measure .)In fact, "γ" is quasi-invariant under translation by an element "v"
if and only if "v" ∈ "i"("H"). Vectors in "i"("H") are sometimes known as Cameron-Martin directions.Integration by parts
The Cameron-Martin formula gives rise to an
integration by parts formula on "E": if "F" : "E" → R has boundedFréchet derivative D"F" : "E" → Lin("E"; R) = "E"∗, integrating the Cameron-Martin formula with respect to Wiener measure on both sides gives:
for any "t" ∈ R. Formally differentiating with respect to "t" and evaluating at "t" = 0 gives the integration by parts formula
:
Comparison with the
divergence theorem ofvector calculus suggests:
where "V""h" : "E" → "E" is the constant "
vector field " "V""h"("x") = "i"("h") for all "x" ∈ "E". The wish to consider more general vector fields and to think of stochastic integrals as "divergences" leads to the study ofstochastic processes and theMalliavin calculus , and, in particular, theClark-Ocone theorem and its associated integration by parts formula.
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