Author:
Janson Svante,Sen Subhabrata,Spencer Joel
Abstract
AbstractWe study an urn process with two urns, initialized with a ball each. Balls are added sequentially, the urn being chosen independently with probability proportional to the $\alpha$th power $(\alpha >1)$ of the existing number of balls. We study the (rare) event that the urn compositions are balanced after the addition of $2n-2$ new balls. We derive precise asymptotics of the probability of this event by embedding the process in continuous time. Quite surprisingly, fine control of this probability may be leveraged to derive a lower-tail large deviation principle (LDP) for $L = \sum_{i=1}^{n} ({S_i^2}/{i^2})$, where $\{S_n \colon n \geq 0\}$ is a simple symmetric random walk started at zero. We provide an alternative proof of the LDP via coupling to Brownian motion, and subsequent derivation of the LDP for a continuous-time analog of L. Finally, we turn our attention back to the urn process conditioned to be balanced, and provide a functional limit law describing the trajectory of the urn process.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Statistics and Probability
Reference24 articles.
1. Stopping Times and Tightness
2. [2] Aleksandrov, A. B. , Janson, S. , Peller, V. V. and Rochberg, R. (2002). An interesting class of operators with unusual Schatten–von Neumann behavior. In Function Spaces, Interpolation Theory and Related Topics (Lund, 2000), pp. 61–149. De Gruyter, Berlin.
3. Proofs of the martingale FCLT
4. Foundations of Modern Probability