How can we derivate with a constant in trying to prove that correlation coefficient between -1 and 1

Shaylee Pace

Shaylee Pace

Open question

2022-08-19

How can we derivate with a constant in trying to prove that correlation coefficient is between -1 and 1?

Answer & Explanation

Douglas Woodard

Douglas Woodard

Beginner2022-08-20Added 8 answers

Step 1
We suppose we have random variables X and Y with known distributions.
Then Var [ 2 X + Y ] is the variance of a variable 2 X + Y . . The variance is a real number.
Also Var [ 3 X + Y ] is the variance of another variable; that variance also is a real number.
Similarly Var [ 17 X + Y ] .
In fact, you can take any real number a, put it in the expression
Var [ a X + Y ] ,
and out comes a real number, which happens to be the variance of the random variable you've just put together.
Or in other words we have a function f such that for any real number a,
f ( a ) = Var [ a X + Y ] .
In fact it is a differentiable function, so you can take its derivative with respect to a.
We know that
f ( a ) = a 2 Var [ X ] + 2 a Covar [ X , Y ] + Var [ Y ] .
And since X and Y are already known distributions that don't depend on a, the expressions Var [ X ] , Covar [ X , Y ] , , and Var [ Y ] , which are determined just by those known distributions, are constants.

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