Definition
Cumulative distribution functions are examples of càdlàg functions.
Let (M,d) be a metric space, and let
That is, f is right-continuous with left limits. Examples
Skorokhod spaceThe set of all càdlàg functions from E to M is often denoted by D(E;M) (or simply D) and is called Skorokhod space after the Ukrainian mathematician Anatoliy Skorokhod. Skorokhod space can be assigned a topology that, intuitively allows us to "wiggle space and time a bit" (whereas the traditional topology of uniform convergence only allows us to "wiggle space a bit"). For simplicity, take E = [0,T and We must first define an analogue of the modulus of continuity, and, for δ > 0, define the càdlàg modulus to be where the infimum runs over all partitions Now let Λ denote the set of all strictly increasing, continuous bijections from E to itself (these are "wiggles in time"). Let denote the uniform norm on functions on E. Define the Skorokhod metric σ on D by
where It can be shown that the Skorokhod metric is, indeed a metric. The topology Σ generated by σ is called the Skorokhod topology on D. Properties of Skorokhod spaceGeneralization of the uniform topologyThe space C of continuous functions on E is a subspace of D. The Skorokhod topology on D coincides with the topology of uniform convergence on C. CompletenessIt can be shown that, although D is not a complete space with respect to the Skorokhod metric σ, there is a topologically equivalent metric σ0 with respect to which D is complete. SeparabilityWith respect to either σ or σ0, D is a separable space. Thus, Skorokhod space is a Polish space. Tightness in Skorokhod spaceBy an application of the Arzelà-Ascoli theorem, one can show that a sequence and References
| |