Note that
iff
.
Set
. Then
so that
Thus,
is a (S)MG iff
Summary: convergence of submartingales
The submartingale convergence theorem
If
is a SMG with
,
then there exists
such that
Uniform integrability and some convergence conditions
Definition . The class
is
uniformly integrable iff
Any of the following conditions ensures uniform integrability:
- The class is dominated by an integrable random variable
Y .
- The class is finite and integrable.
- There is a u.i. class
such that
for all
.
-
X integrable implies Doob's MG
is u.i.
Definition . The class
is
uniformly absolutely
continuous iff for each
there is a
such that
implies
.
is u.i. iff both (i)
X
T is u.a.c., and
(ii)
.
Definition .
iff
as
for all
.
implies
If (i)
, (ii)
and (iii)
exists a.s., then
Suppose
is a (S)MG. Consider the following
Then
- Each of the propositions (a) through (d
) implies (A), hence
SMG convergence.
- (a)
(a
)
- (a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
- (a
)
(b
)
(c
)
(d
)
- For a MG, (d)
(a), so that (a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
The notion of
regularity is characterized in terms of the conditions in
the theorem.
Definition . A martingale
is said to be
martingale regular iff the equivalent conditions (a), (b), (c), (d) in
the theorem hold.
A submartingale
is said to be
submartingale regular iff
the equivalent conditions (a
), (b
), (c
), (d
) in
the theorem hold.
Remarks
- Since a MG is a SMG, a martingale regular MG is also submartingale regular.
- It is
not true, in general that a submartingale regular SMG is
martingale regular. We do have for SMG (a)
(b)
(c)
(d).
- Regularity may be viewed in terms of membership of
X
∞ in the (S)MG.
The condition
is indicated by saying
X
∞
belongs to the (S)MG or by saying the (S)MG is
closed (on
the right) by
X
∞ .
Summary
For a
martingale
- If martingale regular, then
and
and
- If submartingale regular, but not martingale regular, then
but
and
For a
submartingale
Either martingale regularity or submartingale regularity implies
and
and
If
X
N is
uniformly integrable , then
.
If
is a MG with
, then the
proceess is MG regular, with