We consider a system of stochastic differential equations driven by a standard n-dimensional Brownian motion where the drift function b is bounded and the diffusion coefficient is the identity matrix.We define via a duality relation a vector Z (which depends on b) of square integrable stochastic processes which is shown to coincide with the unique strong solution of the previously mentioned equation. We show that the process Z is well defined independently of the boundedness of b and that it makes sense under the more general Novikov condition, which is known to guarantee only the existence of a weak solution. We then prove that under this mild assumption the process Z solves in the strong sense a related stochastic differential inequality. This fact together with an additional assumption will provide a comparison result similar to well known theorems obtained in the presence of strong solutions. Our framework is also suitable to treat path-dependent stochastic differential equations and an application to the famous Tsirelson equation is presented.
Lanconelli A (2014). A comparison theorem for stochastic differential equations under the Novikov condition. POTENTIAL ANALYSIS, 41(4), 1065-1077 [10.1007/s11118-014-9413-x].
A comparison theorem for stochastic differential equations under the Novikov condition
Lanconelli A
Investigation
2014
Abstract
We consider a system of stochastic differential equations driven by a standard n-dimensional Brownian motion where the drift function b is bounded and the diffusion coefficient is the identity matrix.We define via a duality relation a vector Z (which depends on b) of square integrable stochastic processes which is shown to coincide with the unique strong solution of the previously mentioned equation. We show that the process Z is well defined independently of the boundedness of b and that it makes sense under the more general Novikov condition, which is known to guarantee only the existence of a weak solution. We then prove that under this mild assumption the process Z solves in the strong sense a related stochastic differential inequality. This fact together with an additional assumption will provide a comparison result similar to well known theorems obtained in the presence of strong solutions. Our framework is also suitable to treat path-dependent stochastic differential equations and an application to the famous Tsirelson equation is presented.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.