Abstract

.We have shown recently that a Markov process conditioned on rare events involving time-integrated random variables can be described in the long-time limit by an effective Markov process, called the driven process, which is given mathematically by a generalization of Doob’s h-transform. We show here that this driven process can be represented in two other ways: first, as a process satisfying various variational principles involving large deviation functions and relative entropies and, second, as an optimal stochastic control process minimizing a cost function also related to large deviation functions. These interpretations of the driven process generalize and unify many previous results on maximum entropy approaches to nonequilibrium systems, spectral characterizations of positive operators, and control approaches to large deviation theory. They also lead, as briefly discussed, to new methods for analytically or numerically approximating large deviation functions.

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