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MATH 3033 based on Dekking et al. A Modern Introduction to Probability and Statistics. 2007 Slides by Gautam Shankar Format by Tim Birbeck Instructor Longin Jan Latecki C12: The Poisson process 12.1 – Random Points Poisson process model: often applies in situations where there is a very large population, and each member of the population has a very small probability to produce a point of the process. Examples of Random points: arrival times of email messages at a server, the times at which asteroids hit earth, arrival times of radioactive particles at a Geiger counter, times at which your computer crashes, the times at which electronic components fail, and arrival times of people at a pump in an oasis. 12.2 – Taking a closer look at random arrivals Example: Telephone calls arrival times Calls arrive at random times, X1, X2, X3… Homegeneity aka weak stationarity: is the rate lambda at which arrivals occur in constant over time: in a subinterval of length u the expectation of the number of telephone calls is lambda * u. Independence: The number of arrivals in disjoint time intervals are independent random variables. N(I) = total number of calls in an interval I N([0,t]) Nt E[Nt] = λ t Divide Interval [0,t] into n intervals, each of size t/n 12.2 – Taking a closer look at random arrivals When n is large enough, every interval Ij,n = ((j-1)t/n , jt/n] will contain either 0 or 1 arrival. Arrival: For such a large n ( n > λ t), Rj = number of arrivals in the time interval Ij,n Rj has a Ber(pj) distribution for some pj. Recall: (For a Bernoulli random variable) E[Rj] = 0 • (1 – pj) + 1 • pj = pj By Homogeneity assumption (see prev slide), for each j pj = λ • length of Ij,n = ( λ t / n) Total number of calls: Nt = R1 + R2 + … + Rn. By Independence assumption (see prev slide) Rj are independent random variables, so Nt has a Bin(n,p) distribution, with p = λ t/n 12.2 – Taking a closer look at random arrivals Definition: A discrete random variable X has a Poisson distribution with parameter µ, where µ > 0 if its probability mass function p is given by k for k = 0,1,2.. P(k) P(X k) k! e We denote this distribution by Pois(µ) The Expectation an variance of a Poisson Distribution Let X have a Poisson distribution with parameter µ; then E[X] = µ and Var(X) = µ 12.3 – The one-dimensional Poisson process Interarrival Times The differences Ti = Xi – Xi-1 are called interarrival times. This imples that P(T1 t) 1 - P(T1 t) 1 - P(N t 0) 1 - e -t Therefore T1 has an exponential distribution with parameter λ P(T2 t | T1 s) P(no arrivals in (s, s t] | T1 s) P(no arrivals in (s, s t]) P(N((s, s t]) 0) e - t 12.3 – The one-dimensional Poisson process T1 and T2 are independent, and P(T2 t) e - t The one-dimensional Poisson process with intensity λ is a sequence X1 , X 2, X 3 ,.. Of random variables having the property that the inter-arrival times X 1 , X 2 X 1 , X 3 X 2 ,... are independent random variables, each with an Exp(λ) distribution. N t is equal to the number of Xi that are smaller than (or equal to) t.