In probability theory, one definition of a subexponential distribution is as a probability distribution whose tails decay at an exponential rate, or faster: a real-valued distribution
is called subexponential if, for a random variable
,
, for large
and some constant
.
The subexponential norm,
, of a random variable is defined by
where the infimum is taken to be
if no such
exists.
This is an example of a Orlicz norm. An equivalent condition for a distribution
to be subexponential is then that
: §2.7
Subexponentiality can also be expressed in the following equivalent ways:: §2.7
for all
and some constant
.
for all
and some constant
.
- For some constant
,
for all
.
exists and for some constant
,
for all
.
is sub-Gaussian.