Suppose X is a real random variable with some density function f X </msub> ( x

shmilybaby4i

shmilybaby4i

Answered question

2022-06-22

Suppose X is a real random variable with some density function f X ( x ). Let Y = g ( X ), where g ( . ) : R R n .
Is there a general way to represent the density f Y ( y )?
For example, consider a simple case, X U n i f o r m ( 0 , 1 ). ( Y 1 , Y 2 ) = ( X + 1 , X + 2 ). Is there a closed form expression for the density of ( Y 1 , Y 2 ) in R 2 ?
Edit:
Dirac measures are permitted. In the above simple case, I presume the density could be
f ( Y 1 , Y 2 ) ( y 1 , y 2 ) = { δ ( y 1 y 2 + 1 ) 1 y 1 2  and  2 y 2 3 0 else

Answer & Explanation

grcalia1

grcalia1

Beginner2022-06-23Added 23 answers

Your example was good, because it illustrates exactly why this can't be done in general. You cannot find a density function for that example, because the support of ( Y 1 , Y 2 ), and hence the support of its density function f (should it exist), would be the line segment { x + 1 , x + 2 : x [ 0 , 1 ] }. Because that set has measure 0 in R 2 , we would necessarily obtain R f d A = 0 for any region R.
The issue is dimensionality; presuming g is well-behaved at all (e.g. continuous is enough to cause the problem), the support of Y will necessarily be one-dimensional, and it will not be possible to furnish a density function in the higher-dimensional space.

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