Matrix describing continuous-time Markov chains
In probability theory, a transition-rate matrix (also known as a Q-matrix, intensity matrix,[2] or infinitesimal generator matrix[3]) is an array of numbers describing the instantaneous rate at which a continuous-time Markov chain transitions between states.
In a transition-rate matrix
(sometimes written
[4]), element
(for
) denotes the rate departing from
and arriving in state
. The rates
, and the diagonal elements
are defined such that
,
and therefore the rows of the matrix sum to zero.
Up to a global sign, a large class of examples of such matrices is provided by the Laplacian of a directed, weighted graph. The vertices of the graph correspond to the Markov chain's states.
Properties
The transition-rate matrix has following properties:[5]
- There is at least one eigenvector with a vanishing eigenvalue, exactly one if the graph of
is strongly connected.
- All other eigenvalues
fulfill
.
- All eigenvectors
with a non-zero eigenvalue fulfill
.
- The Transition-rate matrix satisfies the relation
where P(t) is the continuous stochastic matrix.
Example
An M/M/1 queue, a model which counts the number of jobs in a queueing system with arrivals at rate λ and services at rate μ, has transition-rate matrix

See also
References