Arcsine distribution

In probability theory, the arcsine distribution is the probability distribution whose cumulative distribution function involves the arcsine and the square root:

Arcsine
Probability density function
Cumulative distribution function
Parameters none
Support
PDF
CDF
Mean
Median
Mode
Variance
Skewness
Ex. kurtosis
Entropy
MGF
CF

for 0  x  1, and whose probability density function is

on (0, 1). The standard arcsine distribution is a special case of the beta distribution with α = β = 1/2. That is, if is an arcsine-distributed random variable, then . By extension, the arcsine distribution is a special case of the Pearson type I distribution.

The arcsine distribution appears in the Lévy arcsine law, in the Erdős arcsine law, and as the Jeffreys prior for the probability of success of a Bernoulli trial.[1] [2]

Generalization

Arcsine – bounded support
Parameters
Support
PDF
CDF
Mean
Median
Mode
Variance
Skewness
Ex. kurtosis

Arbitrary bounded support

The distribution can be expanded to include any bounded support from a  x  b by a simple transformation

for a  x  b, and whose probability density function is

on (a, b).

Shape factor

The generalized standard arcsine distribution on (0,1) with probability density function

is also a special case of the beta distribution with parameters .

Note that when the general arcsine distribution reduces to the standard distribution listed above.

Properties

  • Arcsine distribution is closed under translation and scaling by a positive factor
    • If
  • The square of an arcsine distribution over (-1, 1) has arcsine distribution over (0, 1)
    • If

Characteristic function

The characteristic function of the arcsine distribution is a confluent hypergeometric function and given as .

  • If U and V are i.i.d uniform (−π,π) random variables, then , , , and all have an distribution.
  • If is the generalized arcsine distribution with shape parameter supported on the finite interval [a,b] then
  • If X ~ Cauchy(0, 1) then has a standard arcsine distribution

Application

The arcsine distribution has an application to beamforming and pattern synthesis.[3]

References

  1. Overturf, Drew; Buchanan, Kristopher; Jensen, Jeffrey; Wheeland, Sara; Huff, Gregory (2017). "Investigation of beamforming patterns from volumetrically distributed phased arrays". MILCOM 2017 - 2017 IEEE Military Communications Conference (MILCOM). pp. 817–822. doi:10.1109/MILCOM.2017.8170756. ISBN 978-1-5386-0595-0. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/8170756/
  2. K. Buchanan, J. Jensen, C. Flores-Molina, S. Wheeland and G. H. Huff, "Null Beamsteering Using Distributed Arrays and Shared Aperture Distributions," in IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, vol. 68, no. 7, pp. 5353-5364, July 2020, doi: 10.1109/TAP.2020.2978887.
  3. Overturf, Drew; Buchanan, Kris; Jensen, Jeff; Flores-Molina, Carlos; Wheeland, Sara; Huff, Gregory H. (2017). "Investigation of beamforming patterns from volumetrically distributed phased arrays". MILCOM 2017 - 2017 IEEE Military Communications Conference (MILCOM). pp. 817–822. doi:10.1109/MILCOM.2017.8170756. ISBN 978-1-5386-0595-0. S2CID 11591305.

Further reading

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