Matrix-exponential distribution
In probability theory, the matrix-exponential distribution is an absolutely continuous distribution with rational Laplace–Stieltjes transform. They were first introduced by David Cox in 1955 as distributions with rational Laplace–Stieltjes transforms.
Parameters | α, T, s | ||
---|---|---|---|
Support | x ∈ [0, ∞) | ||
α ex Ts | |||
CDF | 1 + αexTT−1s |
The probability density function is (and 0 when x < 0), and the cumulative distribution function is where 1 is a vector of 1s and
There are no restrictions on the parameters α, T, s other than that they correspond to a probability distribution. There is no straightforward way to ascertain if a particular set of parameters form such a distribution. The dimension of the matrix T is the order of the matrix-exponential representation.
The distribution is a generalisation of the phase-type distribution.