The Factorisation of the rectangular distribution

1967 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 529-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Lewis

Questions of the decomposability of distribution functions into real-valued components of bounded variation were discussed by P. Lévy (1964) in relation to the nature of the components, whether non-decreasing (distribution functions in particular) or absolutely continuous (a.c.) or both. Hanson (1965), in a review of Lévy's paper, raised the question of whether or not a rectangular distribution could be decomposed into two a.c. distributions. In fact, D. G. Kendall had conjectured earlier (Kendall (1960)) that no such decomposition is possible. The object of this paper is to state and prove the truth of Kendall's conjecture. “Decomposition” or “factorisation” will be understood throughout the paper to mean decomposition into distributions. Decompositions of the rectangular distribution into one a.c. and one discrete factor are well known (see, e.g., Lukacs (1960) pp. 128–9), and decompositions in which both factors are singular continuous (s.c.) have been discovered by Kendall and by P. M. Lee; it is shown here that no other combinations of factor-type can exist. References to other work on related decomposability properties are given in the papers by Lévy and Kendall cited above.

1967 ◽  
Vol 4 (03) ◽  
pp. 529-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Lewis

Questions of the decomposability of distribution functions into real-valued components of bounded variation were discussed by P. Lévy (1964) in relation to the nature of the components, whether non-decreasing (distribution functions in particular) or absolutely continuous (a.c.) or both. Hanson (1965), in a review of Lévy's paper, raised the question of whether or not a rectangular distribution could be decomposed into two a.c. distributions. In fact, D. G. Kendall had conjectured earlier (Kendall (1960)) that no such decomposition is possible. The object of this paper is to state and prove the truth of Kendall's conjecture. “Decomposition” or “factorisation” will be understood throughout the paper to mean decomposition into distributions. Decompositions of the rectangular distribution into one a.c. and one discrete factor are well known (see, e.g., Lukacs (1960) pp. 128–9), and decompositions in which both factors are singular continuous (s.c.) have been discovered by Kendall and by P. M. Lee; it is shown here that no other combinations of factor-type can exist. References to other work on related decomposability properties are given in the papers by Lévy and Kendall cited above.


1982 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franz Hofbauer ◽  
Gerhard Keller

AbstractWe show that equilibrium states μ of a function φ on ([0,1], T), where T is piecewise monotonic, have strong ergodic properties in the following three cases:(i) sup φ — inf φ <htop(T) and φ is of bounded variation.(ii) φ satisfies a variation condition and T has a local specification property.(iii) φ = —log |T′|, which gives an absolutely continuous μ, T is C2, the orbits of the critical points of T are finite, and all periodic orbits of T are uniformly repelling.


2013 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
José Giménez ◽  
Lorena López ◽  
N. Merentes

AbstractIn this paper, we discuss and present various results about acting and boundedness conditions of the autonomous Nemitskij operator on certain function spaces related to the space of all real valued Lipschitz (of bounded variation, absolutely continuous) functions defined on a compact interval of ℝ. We obtain a result concerning the integrability of products of the form


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