Brownian bridge

Brownian motion, pinned at both ends. This represents a Brownian bridge.

A Brownian bridge is a continuous-time gaussian process B(t) whose probability distribution is the conditional probability distribution of a standard Wiener process W(t) (a mathematical model of Brownian motion) subject to the condition (when standardized) that W(T) = 0, so that the process is pinned to the same value at both t = 0 and t = T. More precisely:

The expected value of the bridge at any t in the interval [0,T] is zero, with variance , implying that the most uncertainty is in the middle of the bridge, with zero uncertainty at the nodes. The covariance of B(s) and B(t) is , or s(T − t)/T if s < t. The increments in a Brownian bridge are not independent.