Ornstein–Uhlenbeck operator


In mathematics, the Ornstein–Uhlenbeck operator is a generalization of the Laplace operator to an infinite-dimensional setting. The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck operator plays a significant role in the Malliavin calculus.

Introduction: the finite-dimensional picture

The Laplacian

Consider the gradient operator ∇ acting on scalar functions f : RnR; the gradient of a scalar function is a vector field v = ∇f : RnRn. The divergence operator div, acting on vector fields to produce scalar fields, is the adjoint operator to ∇. The Laplace operator Δ is then the composition of the divergence and gradient operators:
acting on scalar functions to produce scalar functions. Note that A = −Δ is a positive operator, whereas Δ is a dissipative operator.
Using spectral theory, one can define a square root 1/2 for the operator. This square root satisfies the following relation involving the Sobolev H1-norm and L2-norm for suitable scalar functions f:

The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck operator

Often, when working on Rn, one works with respect to Lebesgue measure, which has many nice properties. However, remember that the aim is to work in infinite-dimensional spaces, and it is a fact that there is no infinite-dimensional Lebesgue measure. Instead, if one is studying some separable Banach space E, what does make sense is a notion of Gaussian measure; in particular, the abstract Wiener space construction makes sense.
To get some intuition about what can be expected in the infinite-dimensional setting, consider standard Gaussian measure γn on Rn: for Borel subsets A of Rn,
This makes into a probability space; E will denote expectation with respect to γn.
The gradient operator ∇ acts on a function φ : RnR to give a vector field ∇φ : RnRn.
The divergence operator δ is now defined to be the adjoint of ∇ in the Hilbert space sense, in the Hilbert space L2. In other words, δ acts on a vector field v : RnRn to give a scalar function δv : RnR, and satisfies the formula
On the left, the product is the pointwise Euclidean dot product of two vector fields; on the right, it is just the pointwise multiplication of two functions. Using integration by parts, one can check that δ acts on a vector field v with components vi, i = 1,..., n, as follows:
The change of notation from “div” to “δ” is for two reasons: first, δ is the notation used in infinite dimensions ; secondly, δ is really the negative of the usual divergence.
The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck operator L is defined by
with the useful formula that for any f and g smooth enough for all the terms to make sense,
The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck operator L is related to the usual Laplacian Δ by

The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck operator for a separable Banach space

Consider now an abstract Wiener space E with Cameron-Martin Hilbert space H and Wiener measure γ. Let D denote the Malliavin derivative. The Malliavin derivative D is an unbounded operator from L2 into L2 - in some sense, it measures “how random” a function on E is. The domain of D is not the whole of L2, but is a dense linear subspace, the Watanabe-Sobolev space, often denoted by .
Again, δ is defined to be the adjoint of the gradient operator. The operator δ is also known the Skorokhod integral, which is an anticipating stochastic integral; it is this set-up that gives rise to the slogan “stochastic integrals are divergences”. δ satisfies the identity
for all F in and v in the domain of δ.
Then the Ornstein–Uhlenbeck operator for E is the operator L defined by