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OscillatoryProcess
The class of oscillatory harmonizable processes represents a significant extension of Priestley's oscillatory stationary processes, generalizing their spectral structure to accommodate non-stationary characteristics while retaining harmonizability. This report rigorously examines the mathematical foundations of these processes, focusing on the non-uniqueness problem associated with their envelope representations and the conditions under which uniqueness can be established. By synthesizing operator-theoretic methods, spectral representations, and covariance analysis, we delineate the structural prerequisites for resolving the envelope ambiguity inherent in earlier formulations.
A stochastic process
where
This framework generalizes stationary processes, where
The covariance of such processes becomes:
where
The oscillatory harmonizable class relaxes the stationarity assumption, allowing
where
ensuring a maximum at
For a weakly harmonizable process
The envelope
serves as a time-dependent amplitude measure. However, for oscillatory harmonizable processes
Hasofer demonstrated that distinct amplitude functions
Consider a time-varying filter
with
As
retaining weak harmonizability [6][14].
Assuming the filter
ensuring the Hilbert transforms
Consequently, the quadrature processes
Theorem. Let
Proof. The spectral representations of
for all
The non-uniqueness of envelope representations for oscillatory harmonizable processes arises from the flexibility in spectral bimeasure parametrization. By constraining amplitude functions through time-invariant filters in the asymptotic limit, the Hilbert transform-induced quadrature process becomes uniquely determined. This theoretical resolution underscores the centrality of operator commutativity and spectral convergence in stabilizing envelope definitions, providing a rigorous foundation for further analytical explorations within the harmonizable paradigm.