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Fractional Brownian motion is a non-Markovian Gaussian process indexed by the Hurst exponent $Hin [0,1]$, generalising standard Brownian motion to account for anomalous diffusion. Functionals of this process are important for practical applications as a standard reference point for non-equilibrium dynamics. We describe a perturbation expansion allowing us to evaluate many non-trivial observables analytically: We generalize the celebrated three arcsine-laws of standard Brownian motion. The functionals are: (i) the fraction of time the process remains positive, (ii) the time when the process last visits the origin, and (iii) the time when it achieves its maximum (or minimum). We derive expressions for the probability of these three functionals as an expansion in $epsilon = H-tfrac{1}{2}$, up to second order. We find that the three probabilities are different, except for $H=tfrac{1}{2}$ where they coincide. Our results are confirmed to high precision by numerical simulations.
We show that the fraction of time a thermodynamic current spends above its average value follows the arcsine law, a prominent result obtained by Levy for Brownian motion. Stochastic currents with long streaks above or below their average are much mor
Diffusive transport in many complex systems features a crossover between anomalous diffusion at short times and normal diffusion at long times. This behavior can be mathematically modeled by cutting off (tempering) beyond a mesoscopic correlation tim
We find the exact winding number distribution of Riemann-Liouville fractional Brownian motion for large times in two dimensions using the propagator of a free particle. The distribution is similar to the Brownian motion case and it is of Cauchy type.
Complex systems display anomalous diffusion, whose signature is a space/time scaling $xsim t^delta$ with $delta e 1/2$ in the Probability Density Function (PDF). Anomalous diffusion can emerge jointly with both Gaussian, e.g., fractional Brownian mo
Tempered fractional Brownian motion is revisited from the viewpoint of reduced fractional Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process. Many of the basic properties of the tempered fractional Brownian motion can be shown to be direct consequences or modifications of t