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Slowly varying function
In real analysis, a branch of mathematics, a slowly varying function is a function of a real variable whose behaviour at infinity is in some sense similar to the behaviour of a function converging at infinity. Similarly, a regularly varying function is a function of a real variable whose behaviour at infinity is similar to the behaviour of a power law function (like a polynomial) near infinity. These classes of functions were both introduced by Jovan Karamata, and have found several important applications, for example in probability theory.
Basic definitions
. A measurable function L : (0, +∞) → (0, +∞) is called slowly varying (at infinity) if for all a > 0 , . Let L : (0, +∞) → (0, +∞) . Then L is a regularly varying function if and only if. In particular, the limit must be finite. These definitions are due to Jovan Karamata.
Basic properties
Regularly varying functions have some important properties: a partial list of them is reported below. More extensive analyses of the properties characterizing regular variation are presented in the monograph by.
Uniformity of the limiting behaviour
. The limit in and is uniform if a is restricted to a compact interval.
Karamata's characterization theorem
. Every regularly varying function f : (0, +∞) → (0, +∞) is of the form where Note. This implies that the function g(a) in has necessarily to be of the following form where the real number ρ is called the index of regular variation.
Karamata representation theorem
. A function L is slowly varying if and only if there exists B > 0 such that for all x ≥ B the function can be written in the form where η(x) is a bounded measurable function of a real variable converging to a finite number as x goes to infinity ε(x) is a bounded measurable function of a real variable converging to zero as x goes to infinity.
Examples
β ∈ R , the function is slowly varying. is not slowly varying, nor is for any real β ≠ 0 . However, these functions are regularly varying.
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