I read somewhere that the python library function random.expovariate produces intervals equivalent to Poisson Process events.
Is that really the case or should I impose some other function on the results?
On a strict reading of your question, yes, that is what random.expovariate does.
expovariate gives you random floating point numbers, exponentialy distributed. In a Poission process the size of the interval between consecutive events is exponential.
However, there are two other ways I could imagine modelling poisson processes
- Just generate random numbers, uniformly distributed and sort them.
- Generate integers which have a Poisson distribution (i.e. they are distributed like the number of events within a fixed interval in a Poisson process). Use numpy.random.poisson to do this.
Of course all three things are quite different. The right choice depends on your application.
https://stackoverflow.com/a/10250877/1587329 gives a nice explanation of why this works (not only in python), and some code. In short
simulate the first 10 events in a poisson process with an averate rate of 15 arrivals per second like this:
import random for i in range(1,10): print random.expovariate(15)
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8592048/is-random-expovariate-equivalent-to-a-poisson-process