Poisson limit theorem

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In probability theory, the law of rare events or Poisson limit theorem states that the Poisson distribution may be used as an approximation to the binomial distribution, under certain conditions.[1] The theorem was named after Siméon Denis Poisson (1781–1840). A generalization of this theorem is Le Cam's theorem.

Comparison of the Poisson distribution (black lines) and the binomial distribution with n = 10 (red circles), n = 20 (blue circles), n = 1000 (green circles). All distributions have a mean of 5. The horizontal axis shows the number of events k. As n gets larger, the Poisson distribution becomes an increasingly better approximation for the binomial distribution with the same mean.

Theorem

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Let   be a sequence of real numbers in   such that the sequence   converges to a finite limit  . Then:

 

First proof

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Assume   (the case   is easier). Then

 

Since

 

this leaves

 

Alternative proof

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Using Stirling's approximation, it can be written:

 

Letting   and  :

 

As  ,   so:

 

Ordinary generating functions

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It is also possible to demonstrate the theorem through the use of ordinary generating functions of the binomial distribution:

 

by virtue of the binomial theorem. Taking the limit   while keeping the product   constant, it can be seen:

 

which is the OGF for the Poisson distribution. (The second equality holds due to the definition of the exponential function.)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Papoulis, Athanasios; Pillai, S. Unnikrishna. Probability, Random Variables, and Stochastic Processes (4th ed.).