- $k \in \mathbb{N}$ is fixed
- $(X_n)_{n \geq 1}$ are all independent and follow an uniform law on $[0,k]$
- We define $f(x)=x -\lfloor x \rfloor$
- $S_n= \sum_{i=1}^{n} X_i$
- $Z_n= f(S_n)$
- We want to show that $\forall n \geq 1, S_n -\lfloor S_n \rfloor \sim U[0,1]$
Here are the steps :
- I have found a density of $S_2$
- Show that $Z_2 \sim U[0,1]$
3.(a) Express $f(f(S_n) + X_{n+1})$ with $Z_{n+1}$
3.(b) Deduce that $Z_n \sim U[0,1]$
My attempt:
1.
$f_{S_2}(s)=
\begin{cases}
\frac{1}{k^2} s \quad \text{si} \quad 0 \leq s\leq k \\
\frac{1}{k} (2-\frac{s}{k}) \quad \text{si} \quad k \leq s \leq 2k\\
\end{cases}
$
$F_{S_2}(s)= \begin{cases} \frac{s^2}{2 k^2} \quad \text{si} \quad 0 \leq s\leq k \\ 2\frac{s}{k}-\frac{s^2}{2 k^2} -1 \quad \text{si} \quad k \leq s \leq 2k\\ \end{cases} $
- For this question, let $Z=Z_2$
$0\leq Z \leq 1 $
For $a \leq 1$
$0\leq Z \leq a \iff Z \in \bigcup_{j=0}^{j=k-1} [j,j+a]$
$F_Z(a)= \sum_{j=0}^{j=2k-1} F(j+a)-F(j)$
$ \begin{align*} f_Z(a) &= \sum_{j=0}^{j=2k-1} f_S(a+j) \\ &= \sum_{j=0}^{j=k-1} f_S(a+j) + \sum_{j=k}^{j=2k-1} f_S(a+j) \\ &= \sum_{j=0}^{k-1} \big( \frac{a}{k^2} + \frac{j}{k^2} \big) + \sum_{j=k}^{2k-1} \big( \frac{2}{k} - \frac{a}{k^2} - \frac{j}{k^2}) \\ &= \big( \sum_{j=0}^{k-1} \frac{a}{k^2} - \sum_{j=k}^{2k-1}\frac{a}{k^2} \big) + \sum_{j=0}^{k-1} \frac{j}{k^2} - \sum_{j=0}^{k-1} \frac{j+k}{k^2} + \sum_{j=k}^{2k-1} \frac{2}{k} \\ &= -1 +\sum_{j=k}^{2k-1} \ \frac{2}{k} \\ &=-1+2=1\\ \end{align*} $
3.$f ( f(S_n) + X_{n+1})= f( S_n - \lfloor S_n \rfloor + X_{n+1} )$
Let $Z_n= S_n - \lfloor S_n\rfloor $
$S_{n+1} = S_n+ X_{n+1} = Z_n + \lfloor S_n\rfloor + X_{n+1}$
$ S_{n+1} - \lfloor S_{n+1}\rfloor = f( Z_n + X_{n+1} )$
because $f(x+p)=f(x)$ for all integer $p$
so :
$f ( f(S_n) + X_{n+1}) = Z_{n+1}$
Here is a more elementary rendition of @shalop's answer. The point is that it all boils down to showing the following two claims:
Using this claim, we know that
$$f(X_n+a) = f(f(X_n) + a) \sim \mathcal{U}[0,1]$$
whenever $a \in \mathbb{R}$ and $X_n \sim \mathcal{U}[0,k]$ for some $k\in\mathbb{N}$. Then for any $r \in [0, 1)$, by the independence of $X_n$ and $S_{n-1}$,
\begin{align*} \mathbb{P}(Z_{n} \leq r) = \mathbb{E}[\mathbb{P}(f(X_{n}+S_{n-1}) \leq r \mid S_{n-1})] = \mathbb{E}[r] = r. \end{align*}
Therefore the desired conclusion follows.
Proof of Claim. In the first part, it is clear that $f(U)$ takes values only in $[0,1)$. Now for any $r \in [0,1]$, we have
$$ P(f(U) \leq r) = \sum_{q=0}^{k-1} P(q \leq U \leq q+r) = \sum_{q=0}^{k-1} \frac{r}{k} = r, $$
and therefore $f(U)$ has the desired distribution. In the second part, write $a = \lfloor a \rfloor + \langle a \rangle$, where $\langle a \rangle$ denotes the fractional part of $a$. Then for any $r \in [0,1)$,
\begin{align*} P(f(a+U) \leq r) &= P(\{ 0 \leq U < 1 - \langle a \rangle \} \cap \{ U+\langle a \rangle \leq r \}) \\ &\quad + P( \{ 1 - \langle a \rangle \leq U < 1 \} \cap \{ U+\langle a \rangle - 1 \leq r \}). \end{align*}
Considering the cases $r < \langle a \rangle$ and $r \geq \langle a \rangle$ separately, this can be easily computed as $r$, again proving that $f(a+U) \sim \mathcal{U}[0,1]$. $\square$