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Probability density function
Symmetric α-stable distributions with unit scale factor Skewed centered stable distributions with unit scale factor |
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Cumulative distribution function
CDFs for symmetric α-stable distributions CDFs for skewed centered stable distributions |
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| Parameters |
α ∈ (0, 2] — stability parameter |
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| Support | x ∈ R, or x ∈ [μ, +∞) if α < 1 and β = 1, or x ∈ (-∞, μ] if α < 1 and β = −1 |
| not analytically expressible, except for some parameter values | |
| CDF | not analytically expressible, except for certain parameter values |
| Mean | μ when α > 1, otherwise undefined |
| Median | μ when β = 0, otherwise not analytically expressible |
| Mode | μ when β = 0, otherwise not analytically expressible |
| Variance | 2c2 when α = 2, otherwise infinite |
| Skewness | 0 when α = 2, otherwise undefined |
| Ex. kurtosis | 0 when α = 2, otherwise undefined |
| Entropy | not analytically expressible, except for certain parameter values |
| MGF | undefined |
| CF |
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α ∈ (0, 2] — stability parameter
β ∈ [−1, 1] — skewness parameter (note that skewness is undefined)
c ∈ (0, ∞) — scale parameter
In probability theory, a distribution or a random variable is said to be stable if a linear combination of two independent copies of a random sample has the same distribution, up to location and scale parameters. The stable distribution family is also sometimes referred to as the Lévy alpha-stable distribution, after Paul Lévy, the first mathematician to have studied it.