104 research outputs found
Selfdecomposability and selfsimilarity: a concise primer
We summarize the relations among three classes of laws: infinitely divisible,
selfdecomposable and stable. First we look at them as the solutions of the
Central Limit Problem; then their role is scrutinized in relation to the Levy
and the additive processes with an emphasis on stationarity and selfsimilarity.
Finally we analyze the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck processes driven by Levy noises and
their selfdecomposable stationary distributions, and we end with a few
particular examples.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figures; corrected misprint in the title; redactional
modifications required by the referee; added references from [16] to [28];.
Accepted and in press on Physica
Thou shalt not say "at random" in vain: Bertrand's paradox exposed
We review the well known Bertrand paradoxes, and we first maintain that they
do not point to any probabilistic inconsistency, but rather to the risks
incurred with a careless use of the locution "at random". We claim then that
these paradoxes spring up also in the discussion of the celebrated Buffon's
needle problem, and that they are essentially related to the definition of
(geometrical) probabilities on "uncountably" infinite sets. A few empirical
remarks are finally added to underline the difference between "passive" and
"active" randomness, and the prospects of any experimental decisionComment: 17 pages, 4 figures. Added: Appendix A; References 7, 8, 10;
Modified: Abstract; Section 4; a few sentences elsewher
Phenomenology from relativistic Levy-Schroedinger equations: Application to neutrinos
In continuation of a previous paper a close connection between Feynman propagators and a particular L\'evy stochastic process is established. The approach can be easily applied to the Standard Model SU_C(3)xSU_L(2)xU(1) providing qualitative interesting results. Quantitative results, compatible with experimental data, are obtained in the case of neutrinos
Controlled quantum evolutions and transitions
We study the nonstationary solutions of Fokker-Planck equations associated to
either stationary or nonstationary quantum states. In particular we discuss the
stationary states of quantum systems with singular velocity fields. We
introduce a technique that allows to realize arbitrary evolutions ruled by
these equations, to account for controlled quantum transitions. The method is
illustrated by presenting the detailed treatment of the transition
probabilities and of the controlling time-dependent potentials associated to
the transitions between the stationary, the coherent, and the squeezed states
of the harmonic oscillator. Possible extensions to anharmonic systems and mixed
states are briefly discussed and assessed.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
- …