Diffusion process

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the marketing term, see Diffusion of innovations.

In probability theory, a branch of mathematics, a diffusion process is a solution to a stochastic differential equation. It is a continuous time Markov process with continuous sample paths.

A sample path of a diffusion process mimics the trajectory of a molecule, which is embedded in a flowing fluid and at the same time subjected to random displacements due to collisions with other molecules, i.e. Brownian motion. The position of this molecule is then random; its probability density function is governed by an advection-diffusion equation.

[edit] See also

  • diffusion about diffusion processes in physics