Stationary control of Brownian motion in several dimensions
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Advances in Applied Probability
- Vol. 17 (3) , 531-561
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1427119
Abstract
We address the question of controlling the Brownian path in several dimensions (d≧2) by continually choosing its drift from among vectors of the unit ball in ℝd. The past and present of the path are supposed to be completely observable, while no anticipation of the future is allowed. Imposing a suitable cost on distance from the origin, as well as a cost of effort proportional to the length of the drift vector, ‘reasonable’ procedures turn out to be of the following type: to apply drift of maximal length along the ray towards the origin if the current position is outside a sphere centred at the origin, and to choose zero drift otherwise. It is shown just how to compute the radius of such a sphere in terms of the data of the problem, so that the resulting procedure is optimal.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Recurrence and ergodicity of diffusionsJournal of Multivariate Analysis, 1982
- Optimal stationary linear control of the Wiener processJournal of Optimization Theory and Applications, 1981
- Criteria for Recurrence and Existence of Invariant Measures for Multidimensional DiffusionsThe Annals of Probability, 1978
- Composition and invariance methods for solving some stochastic control problemsAdvances in Applied Probability, 1975
- Deterministic and Stochastic Optimal ControlPublished by Springer Nature ,1975
- Existence of Optimal Stochastic Control LawsSIAM Journal on Control, 1971
- Linear and Quasi-linear Equations of Parabolic TypePublished by American Mathematical Society (AMS) ,1968
- A diffusion model for the control of a damJournal of Applied Probability, 1968
- On Transforming a Certain Class of Stochastic Processes by Absolutely Continuous Substitution of MeasuresTheory of Probability and Its Applications, 1960
- SOME PROPERTIES OF ONE-DIMENSIONAL DIFFUSION PROCESSESMemoirs of the Faculty of Science, Kyushu University. Series A, Mathematics, 1957