InvisibleBlue
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Hi,
I'm trying to prove that X=(X_{t})_{t\geq0} is a Brownian Motion, where X_{t} = tB_{1/t} for t\neq0 and X_{0} = 0. I don't want to use the fact that it's a Gaussian process. So far I am stuck in proving:
\[<br /> X_{t}-X_{s}=X_{t-s} \quad \forall \quad 0\leq s<t<br /> \]<br />
Anyone has any ideas?
I'm trying to prove that X=(X_{t})_{t\geq0} is a Brownian Motion, where X_{t} = tB_{1/t} for t\neq0 and X_{0} = 0. I don't want to use the fact that it's a Gaussian process. So far I am stuck in proving:
\[<br /> X_{t}-X_{s}=X_{t-s} \quad \forall \quad 0\leq s<t<br /> \]<br />
Anyone has any ideas?