Zakai equation

In filtering theory the Zakai equation is a linear stochastic partial differential equation for the un-normalized density of a hidden state. In contrast, the Kushner equation gives a non-linear stochastic partial differential equation for the normalized density of the hidden state. In principle either approach allows one to estimate a quantity function (the state of a Dynamical system) from noisy measurements, even when the system is non-linear (thus generalizing the earlier results of Wiener and Kalman for linear systems and solving a central problem in estimation theory). The application of this approach to a specific engineering situation may be problematic however, as these equations are quite complex. The Zakai equation is a bilinear stochastic partial differential equation. It was named after Moshe Zakai.

Overview

Assume the state of the system evolves according to

dx = f(x,t) dt + dw

and a noisy measurement of the system state is available:

dz = h(x,t) dt + dv

where dw, dv are independent Wiener processes. Then the unnormalized conditional probability density p(x,t) of the state at time t is given by the Zakai equation:

dp = L(p) dt + p h^T dz

where the operator L = -\sum \frac{\partial (f_i p)}{\partial x_i} + \frac12 \sum \frac{\partial^2 p}{\partial x_i \partial x_j}

As previously mentioned p is an unnormalized density, i.e. it does not necessarily integrate to 1. After solving for p we can integrate it and normalize it if desired (an extra step not required in the Kushner approach).

Note that if the last two terms on the right hand side are omitted (by choosing h identically zero), we are left with a nonstochastic PDE: the familiar Kolmogorov Forward Equation, which describes the evolution of the state when no measurement information is available.

See also

References