An invariance principle for non-symmetric Markov processes and reflecting diffusions in random domains
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1346964
DOI10.1007/BF01192195zbMath0816.60079MaRDI QIDQ1346964
Hirofumi Osada, Toshifumi Saitoh
Publication date: 6 July 1995
Published in: Probability Theory and Related Fields (Search for Journal in Brave)
homogenization probleminvariance principle for additive functionalsnon-symmetric reflecting diffusions in random domains
Diffusion processes (60J60) Local time and additive functionals (60J55) Parabolic equations and parabolic systems (35K99)
Related Items
Finite-dimensional approximation of the self-diffusion coefficient for the exclusion process ⋮ Limit theorems for Markov chains by the symmetrization method ⋮ The sector constants of continuous state branching processes with immigration ⋮ An invariance principle for stochastic heat equations with periodic coefficients ⋮ A central limit theorem for stochastic heat equations in random environment ⋮ Effective conductivity and skew Brownian motion. ⋮ Stochastic geometry and dynamics of infinitely many particle systems—random matrices and interacting Brownian motions in infinite dimensions ⋮ On the sector condition and homogenization of diffusions with a Gaussian drift
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Stochastic calculus related to non-symmetric Dirichlet forms
- An invariance principle for reversible Markov processes. Applications to random motions in random environments
- A central limit theorem for diffusions with periodic coefficients
- Central limit theorem for additive functionals of reversible Markov processes and applications to simple exclusions
- Homogenization of a diffusion process in a divergence-free random field
- A construction of reflecting barrier Brownian motions for bounded domains
- Homogenization of a reflecting barrier Brownian motion in a continuum percolation cluster in \(R^ d\)
- Limit theorems for a class of diffusion processes
- Explicit Constants for Gaussian Upper Bounds on Heat Kernels
- CONDUCTIVITY OF TWO-DIMENSIONAL RANDOM MEDIA