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Probability distribution
In mathematics and statistics, a probability distribution, more properly called a probability density, assigns to every interval of the real numbers a probability, so that the probability axioms are satisfied. In technical terms, a probability distribution is a probability measure whose domain is the Borel algebra on the reals.
A probability distribution is a special case of the more general notion of a probability measure, which is a function that assigns probabilities satisfying the Kolmogorov axioms to the measurable sets of a measurable space. Additionally, some authors define a distribution generally as the probability measure induced by a random variable X on its range - the probability of a set B is P(X − 1(B)). However, his article will only concern itself with probability measures over the real numbers.
Every random variable gives rise to a probability distribution, and this distribution contains most of the important information about the variable. If X is a random variable, the corresponding probability distribution assigns to the interval [a, b] the probability Pr[a ≤ X ≤ b], i.e. the probability that the variable X will take a value in the interval [a, b].
The probability distribution of the variable X can be uniquely described by its cumulative distribution function F(x), which is defined by
![F(x) = \Pr\left[ X \le x \right]](http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/a/6/7/a67f2dc9d1d17966479300f3ea00d630.png)
for any x in R.
A distribution is called discrete if its cumulative distribution function consists of a sequence of finite jumps, which means that it belongs to a discrete random variable X: a variable which can only attain values from a certain finite or countable set. By one convention, a distribution is called continuous if its cumulative distribution function is continuous, which means that it belongs to a random variable X for which Pr[ X = x ] = 0 for all x in R. Another convention reserves the term continuous probability distribution for absolutely continuous distributions. These can be expressed by a probability density function: a non-negative Lebesgue integrable function f defined on the reals such that
![\Pr \left[ a \le X \le b \right] = \int_a^b f(x)\,dx](http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/0/6/4/0643ca1be8599c859982f7cdcef6b758.png)
for all a and b. That discrete distributions do not admit such a density is unsurprising, but there are continuous distributions like the devil's staircase that also do not admit a density.
- The support of a distribution is the smallest closed set whose complement has probability zero.
- The probability distribution of the sum of two independent random variables is the convolution of each of their distributions.
- The probability distribution of the difference of two random variables is the cross-correlation of each of their distributions.
List of important probability distributions
Several probability distributions are so important in theory or applications that they have been given specific names:
Discrete distributions
With finite support
- The Bernoulli distribution, which takes value 1 with probability p and value 0 with probability q = 1 − p.
- The Rademacher distribution, which takes value 1 with probability 1/2 and value −1 with probability 1/2.
- The binomial distribution describes the number of successes in a series of independent Yes/No experiments.
- The degenerate distribution at x0, where X is certain to take the value x0. This does not look random, but it satisfies the definition of random variable. This is useful because it puts deterministic variables and random variables in the same formalism.
- The discrete uniform distribution, where all elements of a finite set are equally likely. This is supposed to be the distribution of a balanced coin, an unbiased die, a casino roulette or a well-shuffled deck. Also, one can use measurements of quantum states to generate uniform random variables. All these are "physical" or "mechanical" devices, subject to design flaws or perturbations, so the uniform distribution is only an approximation of their behaviour. In digital computers, pseudo-random number generators are used to produced a statistically random discrete uniform distribution.
- The hypergeometric distribution, which describes the number of successes in the first m of a series of n independent Yes/No experiments, if the total number of successes is known.
- Zipf's law or the Zipf distribution. A discrete power-law distribution, the most famous example of which is the description of the frequency of words in the English language.
- The Zipf-Mandelbrot law is a discrete power law distribution which is a generalization of the Zipf distribution.
With infinite support
- The Boltzmann distribution, a discrete distribution important in statistical physics which describes the probabilities of the various discrete energy levels of a system in thermal equilibrium. It has a continuous analogue. Special cases include:
- The geometric distribution, a discrete distribution which describes the number of attempts needed to get the first success in a series of independent Yes/No experiments.
Continuous distributions
Supported on a bounded interval
- The Beta distribution on [0,1], of which the uniform distribution is a special case, and which is useful in estimating success probabilities.
Supported on semi-infinite intervals, usually [0,∞)
Supported on the whole real line
- The Beta prime distribution
- The Cauchy distribution, an example of a distribution which does not have an expected value or a variance. In physics it is usually called a Lorentzian profile, and is associated with many processes, including resonance energy distribution, impact and natural spectral line broadening and quadratic stark line broadening.
- The Fisher-Tippett, extreme value, or log-Weibull distribution
- The generalized extreme value distribution
- The hyperbolic secant distribution
- The Landau distribution
- The Laplace distribution
- The Lévy skew alpha-stable distribution is often used to characterize financial data and critical behavior.
- The map-Airy distribution
- The normal distribution, also called the Gaussian or the bell curve. It is ubiquitous in nature and statistics due to the central limit theorem: every variable that can be modelled as a sum of many small independent variables is approximately normal.
- Student's t-distribution, useful for estimating unknown means of Gaussian populations.
- The type-1 Gumbel distribution
- The Voigt distribution, or Voigt profile, is the convolution of a normal distribution and a Cauchy distribution. It is found in spectroscopy when spectral line profiles are broadened by a mixture of Lorentzian and Doppler broadening mechanisms.
Joint distributions
For any set of independent random variables the probability density function of the joint distribution is the product of the individual ones.
Two or more random variables on the same sample space
Matrix-valued distributions
Miscellaneous distributions
See also
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