This article is about the mathematics of Student's 
t-distribution. For its uses in statistics, see 
Student's t-test.
 
| Student's t | 
|---|
| 
 Probability density function  | 
| 
 Cumulative distribution function  | 
| Parameters | 
  degrees of freedom (real, almost always a positive integer) | 
|---|
| Support | 
  | 
|---|
| PDF | 
  | 
|---|
| CDF | 
   
 where   is the hypergeometric function | 
|---|
| Mean | 
  for   otherwise undefined | 
|---|
| Median | 
  | 
|---|
| Mode | 
  | 
|---|
| Variance | 
  for   ∞ for   otherwise undefined | 
|---|
| Skewness | 
  for   otherwise undefined | 
|---|
| Excess kurtosis | 
  for   ∞ for   otherwise undefined | 
|---|
| Entropy | 
 ![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}&{\frac {\nu +1}{2}}\left[\psi \left({\frac {\nu +1}{2}}\right)-\psi \left({\frac {\nu }{2}}\right)\right]\\&\quad +\ln \left[{\sqrt {\nu }}\,\mathrm {B} \left({\frac {\nu }{2}},{\frac {1}{2}}\right)\right]~{\text{(nats)}},\end{aligned}}}](./cbad3e4d8d30292729a8ab142b4b77e661b5bbc4.svg)  
where 
  is the digamma function, 
  is the beta function
  | 
|---|
| MGF | 
undefined | 
|---|
| CF | 
   for  ,
  
where   is the modified Bessel function of the second kind | 
|---|
| Expected shortfall | 
 ![{\displaystyle \mu +s\left({\frac {{\big (}\nu +[T^{-1}(1-p)]^{2}{\big )}\times \tau {\big (}T^{-1}(1-p){\big )}}{(\nu -1)(1-p)}}\right),}](./efbabfd94b2b8a675caf5587214d06ec9c467a3c.svg)  
where   is the inverse standardized Student t CDF, and   is the standardized Student t PDF. | 
|---|
In probability theory and statistics, Student's t distribution (or simply the t distribution) 
 is a continuous probability distribution that generalizes the standard normal distribution. Like the latter, it is symmetric around zero and bell-shaped.
However, 
 has heavier tails, and the amount of probability mass in the tails is controlled by the parameter 
. For 
 the Student's t distribution 
 becomes the standard Cauchy distribution, which has very "fat" tails; whereas for 
 it becomes the standard normal distribution 
 which has very "thin" tails.
The name "Student" is a pseudonym used by William Sealy Gosset in his scientific paper publications during his work at the Guinness Brewery in Dublin, Ireland.
The Student's t distribution plays a role in a number of widely used statistical analyses, including Student's t-test for assessing the statistical significance of the difference between two sample means, the construction of confidence intervals for the difference between two population means, and in linear regression analysis.
In the form of the location-scale t distribution 
 it generalizes the normal distribution and also arises in the Bayesian analysis of data from a normal family as a compound distribution when marginalizing over the variance parameter.