Scaling (zooming in or out) is taking a close or distant view of an object. Infinite scaling (the scaling parameter tends to zero or infinity) may lead to a limit which is self-similar and much simpler than the original object. For instance, the classical Donsker's theorem says that all weakly dependent stationary processes with finite variance scale to Brownian motion at large scales.In the case of a random field indexed by two-dimensional parameter, both types of scaling can be anisotropic, meaning that the horizontal and vertical axes are scaled at different rate determined by the ratio >0 of the scaling exponents along the axes. The natural questions under such scaling are whether the scaling limits exist for any >0, and what are these limits are.The book tries to answer these questions. It introduces the concept of scaling transition and discusses its existence for a natural class of planar random fields including Gaussian, linear and some nonlinear ones. The scaling limits are identified and exhibit a surprising trichitomy at a critical point 0, with 'unbalanced' limits having unusual path properties and dependence structure along one of the coordinate axes. Scaling transition occurs in applied sciences (telecommunications and econometrics) when aggregating independent processes with long-range dependence in which case 'unbalanced' limits are classical Gaussian or stable random fields.
- ISBN13 9789811249419
- Publish Date 28 February 2023
- Publish Status Forthcoming
- Publish Country SG
- Imprint World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 280
- Language English
- URL https://worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/12646