Revision as of 01:03, 10 March 2015 by Lu311 (Talk | contribs)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)


ECE Ph.D. Qualifying Exam

Communication, Networking, Signal and Image Processing (CS)

Question 1: Probability and Random Processes

January 2004



1. (30 pts.)

This question consists of two separate short questions relating to the structure of probability space:

(a)

Assume that $ \mathcal{S} $ is the sample space of a random experiment and that $ \mathcal{F}_{1} $ and $ \mathcal{F}_{2} $ are $ \sigma $ -fields (valid event spaces) on $ \mathcal{S} $ . Prove that $ \mathcal{F}_{1}\cap\mathcal{F}_{2} $ is also a $ \sigma $ -field on $ S $ .

(b)

Consider a sample space $ \mathcal{S} $ and corresponding event space $ \mathcal{F} $ . Suppose that $ P_{1} $ and $ P_{2} $ are both balid probability measures defined on $ \mathcal{F} $ . Prove that $ P $ defined by $ P\left(A\right)=\alpha_{1}P_{1}\left(A\right)+\alpha_{2}P_{2}\left(A\right),\qquad\forall A\in\mathcal{F} $ is also a valid probability measure on $ \mathcal{F} $ if $ \alpha_{1},\;\alpha_{2}\geq0 $ and $ \alpha_{1}+\alpha_{2}=1 $ .

Answer

• Because $ P_{1} $ and $ P_{2} $ are valid probability measures, we know that they satisfy the axioms of probability:

1. $ P_{1}\left(A\right)\geq0 $ and $ P_{2}\left(A\right)\geq0 $ , $ \forall A\in\mathcal{F}\left(\mathcal{S}\right) $ .

2. $ P_{1}\left(\mathcal{S}\right)=1 $ and $ P_{2}\left(\mathcal{S}\right)=1 $ .

3. If $ A_{1} $ and $ A_{2}\in\mathcal{F}\left(\mathcal{S}\right) $ are disjoint events, then $ P_{1}\left(A_{1}\cup A_{2}\right)=P_{1}\left(A_{1}\right)+P_{1}\left(A_{2}\right) $ and $ P_{2}\left(A_{1}\cup A_{2}\right)=P_{2}\left(A_{1}\right)+P_{2}\left(A_{2}\right) $ .

4. If $ A_{1},A_{2},\cdots,A_{n},\cdots\in\mathcal{F}\left(\mathcal{S}\right) $ is countable collection of disjoint events, then $ P_{1}\left(\cup_{i=1}^{\infty}A_{i}\right)=\sum_{i=1}^{\infty}P_{1}\left(A_{i}\right) $ and $ P_{2}\left(\cup_{i=1}^{\infty}A_{i}\right)=\sum_{i=1}^{\infty}P_{2}\left(A_{i}\right) $ .

• Now, we check each condition to become a valid probability measure:

1. $ P\left(A\right)=\alpha_{1}P_{1}\left(A\right)+\alpha_{2}P_{2}\left(A\right)\geq0 , \forall A\in\mathcal{F}\left(\mathcal{S}\right) $ .

$ \because\alpha_{1}\geq0,\;\alpha_{2}\geq0,\; P_{1}\left(A\right)\geq0,\text{ and }P_{2}\left(A\right)\geq0 $ .

2. $ P\left(S\right)=\alpha_{1}P_{1}\left(A\right)+\alpha_{2}P_{2}\left(A\right)=\alpha_{1}+\alpha_{2}=1 $ .

3. If $ A_{1} $ and $ A_{2}\in\mathcal{F}\left(\mathcal{S}\right) $ are disjoint events, then $ P\left(A_{1}\cup A_{2}\right)=\alpha_{1}P_{1}\left(A_{1}\cup A_{2}\right)+\alpha_{2}P_{2}\left(A_{1}\cup A_{2}\right)=\alpha_{1}\left\{ P_{1}\left(A_{1}\right)+P_{1}\left(A_{2}\right)\right\} +\alpha_{2}\left\{ P_{2}\left(A_{1}\right)+P_{2}\left(A_{2}\right)\right\} $$ =\alpha_{1}P_{1}\left(A_{1}\right)+\alpha_{2}P_{2}\left(A_{1}\right)+\alpha_{1}P_{1}\left(A_{2}\right)+\alpha_{2}P_{2}\left(A_{2}\right)=P\left(A_{1}\right)+P\left(A_{2}\right). $

4. If $ A_{1},A_{2},\cdots,A_{n},\cdots\in\mathcal{F}\left(\mathcal{S}\right) $ is countable collection of disjoint events, then $ P\left(\cup_{i=0}^{\infty}A_{i}\right)=\alpha_{1}P_{1}\left(\cup_{i=0}^{\infty}A_{i}\right)+\alpha_{2}P_{2}\left(\cup_{i=0}^{\infty}A_{i}\right)=\alpha_{1}\sum_{i=1}^{\infty}P_{1}\left(A_{i}\right)+\alpha_{2}\sum_{i=1}^{\infty}P_{2}\left(A_{i}\right) $$ =\sum_{i=1}^{\infty}\left\{ \alpha_{1}P_{1}\left(A_{i}\right)+\alpha_{2}P_{2}\left(A_{i}\right)\right\} =\sum_{i=1}^{\infty}P\left(A_{i}\right). $


Alumni Liaison

Basic linear algebra uncovers and clarifies very important geometry and algebra.

Dr. Paul Garrett