In measure theory Prokhorov's theorem relates tightness of measures to relative compactness (and hence weak convergence) in the space of probability measures. It is credited to the Soviet mathematician Yuri Vasilyevich Prokhorov, who considered probability measures on complete separable metric spaces. The term "Prokhorov’s theorem" is also applied to later generalizations to either the direct or the inverse statements.
Let ( S , ρ ) {\displaystyle (S,\rho )} be a separable metric space. Let P ( S ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {P}}(S)} denote the collection of all probability measures defined on S {\displaystyle S} (with its Borel σ-algebra).
Theorem.
For Euclidean spaces we have that:
Prokhorov's theorem can be extended to consider complex measures or finite signed measures.
Theorem: Suppose that ( S , ρ ) {\displaystyle (S,\rho )} is a complete separable metric space and Π {\displaystyle \Pi } is a family of Borel complex measures on S {\displaystyle S} . The following statements are equivalent:
Since Prokhorov's theorem expresses tightness in terms of compactness, the Arzelà–Ascoli theorem is often used to substitute for compactness: in function spaces, this leads to a characterization of tightness in terms of the modulus of continuity or an appropriate analogue—see tightness in classical Wiener space and tightness in Skorokhod space.
There are several deep and non-trivial extensions to Prokhorov's theorem. However, those results do not overshadow the importance and the relevance to applications of the original result.