Laplace distribution
| Laplace | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
Probability density function | |||
|
Cumulative distribution function | |||
| Parameters |
location (real) scale (real) | ||
| Support | |||
| CDF | |||
| Quantile | |||
| Mean | |||
| Median | |||
| Mode | |||
| Variance | |||
| MAD | |||
| Skewness | |||
| Excess kurtosis | |||
| Entropy | |||
| MGF | |||
| CF | |||
| Expected shortfall | |||
In probability theory and statistics, the Laplace distribution is a continuous probability distribution named after Pierre-Simon Laplace. It is also sometimes called the double exponential distribution, because it can be thought of as two exponential distributions (with an additional location parameter) spliced together along the x-axis, although the term is also sometimes used to refer to the Gumbel distribution. The difference between two independent identically distributed exponential random variables is governed by a Laplace distribution, as is a Brownian motion evaluated at an exponentially distributed random time. Increments of Laplace motion or a variance gamma process evaluated over the time scale also have a Laplace distribution.