Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Fractional Brownian Motion, the Matérn Process,...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Fractional Brownian Motion, the Matérn Process, and Stochastic Modeling of Turbulent Dispersion

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Fractional Brownian Motion, the Matérn Process, and Stochastic Modeling of Turbulent Dispersion. / Lilly, Jonathan M.; Sykulski, Adam M; Early, Jeffrey J. et al.
In: Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics, Vol. 24, 21.08.2017, p. 481-514.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Lilly, JM, Sykulski, AM, Early, JJ, Olhede, SC & May, ME 2017, 'Fractional Brownian Motion, the Matérn Process, and Stochastic Modeling of Turbulent Dispersion', Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics, vol. 24, pp. 481-514. https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-2017-15

APA

Lilly, J. M., Sykulski, A. M., Early, J. J., Olhede, S. C., & May, M. E. (2017). Fractional Brownian Motion, the Matérn Process, and Stochastic Modeling of Turbulent Dispersion. Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics, 24, 481-514. https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-2017-15

Vancouver

Lilly JM, Sykulski AM, Early JJ, Olhede SC, May ME. Fractional Brownian Motion, the Matérn Process, and Stochastic Modeling of Turbulent Dispersion. Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics. 2017 Aug 21;24:481-514. doi: 10.5194/npg-2017-15

Author

Lilly, Jonathan M. ; Sykulski, Adam M ; Early, Jeffrey J. et al. / Fractional Brownian Motion, the Matérn Process, and Stochastic Modeling of Turbulent Dispersion. In: Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics. 2017 ; Vol. 24. pp. 481-514.

Bibtex

@article{fb3ebecd6b57438dbb2267269391066d,
title = "Fractional Brownian Motion, the Mat{\'e}rn Process, and Stochastic Modeling of Turbulent Dispersion",
abstract = "Stochastic process exhibiting power-law slopes in the frequency domain are frequently well modeled by fractional Brownian motion (fBm). In particular, the spectral slope at high frequencies is associated with the degree of small-scale roughness or fractal dimension. However, a broad class of real-world signals have a high-frequency slope, like fBm, but a plateau in the vicinity of zero frequency. This low-frequency plateau, it is shown, implies that the temporal integral of the process exhibits diffusive behavior, dispersing from its initial location at a constant rate. Such processes are not well modeled by fBm, which has a singularity at zero frequency corresponding to an unbounded rate of dispersion. A more appropriate stochastic model is a much lesser-known random process called the Matern process, which is shown herein to be a damped version of fractional Brownian motion. This article first provides a thorough introduction to fractional Brownian motion, then examines the details of the Matern process and its relationship to fBm. An algorithm for the simulation of the Matern process in O(N log N) operations is given. Unlike fBm, the Matern process is found to provide an excellent match to modeling velocities from particle trajectories in an application to two-dimensional fluid turbulence.",
author = "Lilly, {Jonathan M.} and Sykulski, {Adam M} and Early, {Jeffrey J.} and Olhede, {Sofia C} and May, {M. E.}",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
day = "21",
doi = "10.5194/npg-2017-15",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "481--514",
journal = "Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics",
issn = "1023-5809",
publisher = "European Geosciences Union",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fractional Brownian Motion, the Matérn Process, and Stochastic Modeling of Turbulent Dispersion

AU - Lilly, Jonathan M.

AU - Sykulski, Adam M

AU - Early, Jeffrey J.

AU - Olhede, Sofia C

AU - May, M. E.

PY - 2017/8/21

Y1 - 2017/8/21

N2 - Stochastic process exhibiting power-law slopes in the frequency domain are frequently well modeled by fractional Brownian motion (fBm). In particular, the spectral slope at high frequencies is associated with the degree of small-scale roughness or fractal dimension. However, a broad class of real-world signals have a high-frequency slope, like fBm, but a plateau in the vicinity of zero frequency. This low-frequency plateau, it is shown, implies that the temporal integral of the process exhibits diffusive behavior, dispersing from its initial location at a constant rate. Such processes are not well modeled by fBm, which has a singularity at zero frequency corresponding to an unbounded rate of dispersion. A more appropriate stochastic model is a much lesser-known random process called the Matern process, which is shown herein to be a damped version of fractional Brownian motion. This article first provides a thorough introduction to fractional Brownian motion, then examines the details of the Matern process and its relationship to fBm. An algorithm for the simulation of the Matern process in O(N log N) operations is given. Unlike fBm, the Matern process is found to provide an excellent match to modeling velocities from particle trajectories in an application to two-dimensional fluid turbulence.

AB - Stochastic process exhibiting power-law slopes in the frequency domain are frequently well modeled by fractional Brownian motion (fBm). In particular, the spectral slope at high frequencies is associated with the degree of small-scale roughness or fractal dimension. However, a broad class of real-world signals have a high-frequency slope, like fBm, but a plateau in the vicinity of zero frequency. This low-frequency plateau, it is shown, implies that the temporal integral of the process exhibits diffusive behavior, dispersing from its initial location at a constant rate. Such processes are not well modeled by fBm, which has a singularity at zero frequency corresponding to an unbounded rate of dispersion. A more appropriate stochastic model is a much lesser-known random process called the Matern process, which is shown herein to be a damped version of fractional Brownian motion. This article first provides a thorough introduction to fractional Brownian motion, then examines the details of the Matern process and its relationship to fBm. An algorithm for the simulation of the Matern process in O(N log N) operations is given. Unlike fBm, the Matern process is found to provide an excellent match to modeling velocities from particle trajectories in an application to two-dimensional fluid turbulence.

U2 - 10.5194/npg-2017-15

DO - 10.5194/npg-2017-15

M3 - Journal article

VL - 24

SP - 481

EP - 514

JO - Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics

JF - Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics

SN - 1023-5809

ER -