| RMbessel {RandomFields} | R Documentation |
RMbessel is a stationary isotropic covariance model
belonging to the Bessel family.
The corresponding covariance function only depends on the distance r \ge 0 between
two points and is given by
C(r) = 2^\nu \Gamma(\nu+1) r^{-\nu} J_\nu(r)
where \nu \ge \frac{d-2}2,
\Gamma denotes the gamma function and
J_\nu is a Bessel function of first kind.
RMbessel(nu, var, scale, Aniso, proj)
nu |
a numerical value; should be equal to or greater than
|
var, scale, Aniso, proj |
optional arguments; same meaning for any
|
This covariance models a hole effect (cf. Chiles, J.-P. and Delfiner, P. (1999), p. 92, cf. Gelfand et al. (2010), p. 26).
An important case is \nu=-0.5
which gives the covariance function
C(r)=\cos(r)
and which is only valid for d=1. This equals RMdampedcos for \lambda = 0, there.
A second important case is \nu=0.5 with covariance function
C(r)=\sin(r)/r
which is valid for d \le 3.
This coincides with RMwave.
Note that all valid continuous stationary isotropic covariance
functions for d-dimensional random fields
can be written as scale mixtures of a Bessel type
covariance function with \nu=\frac{d-2}2
(cf. Gelfand et al., 2010, pp. 21–22).
RMbessel returns an object of class RMmodel.
Martin Schlather, schlather@math.uni-mannheim.de, https://www.wim.uni-mannheim.de/schlather/
Chiles, J.-P. and Delfiner, P. (1999) Geostatistics. Modeling Spatial Uncertainty. New York: Wiley.
Gelfand, A. E., Diggle, P., Fuentes, M. and Guttorp, P. (eds.) (2010) Handbook of Spatial Statistics. Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/CRL.
http://homepage.tudelft.nl/11r49/documents/wi4006/bessel.pdf
RMdampedcos,
RMwave,
RMmodel,
RFsimulate,
RFfit.
RFoptions(seed=0) ## *ANY* simulation will have the random seed 0; set
## RFoptions(seed=NA) to make them all random again
model <- RMbessel(nu=1, scale=0.1)
x <- seq(0, 10, 0.02)
plot(model)
plot(RFsimulate(model, x=x))