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on (0, 1). The standard arcsine distribution is a special case of the beta distribution with α = β = 1/2. That is, if is an arcsine-distributed random variable, then . By extension, the arcsine distribution is a special case of the Pearson type I distribution.
The arcsine distribution appears in the Lévy arcsine law, in the Erdős arcsine law, and as the Jeffreys prior for the probability of success of a Bernoulli trial.[1][2] The arcsine probability density is a distribution that appears in several random-walk fundamental theorems. In a fair coin toss random walk, the probability for the time of the last visit to the origin is distributed as an (U-shaped) arcsine distribution.[3][4] In a two-player fair-coin-toss game, a player is said to be in the lead if the random walk (that started at the origin) is above the origin. The most probable number of times that a given player will be in the lead, in a game of length 2N, is not N. On the contrary, N is the least likely number of times that the player will be in the lead. The most likely number of times in the lead is 0 or 2N (following the arcsine distribution).
Arcsine distribution is closed under translation and scaling by a positive factor
If
The square of an arcsine distribution over (-1, 1) has arcsine distribution over (0, 1)
If
The coordinates of points uniformly selected on a circle of radius centered at the origin (0, 0), have an distribution
For example, if we select a point uniformly on the circumference, , we have that the point's x coordinate distribution is , and its y coordinate distribution is
The characteristic function of the generalized arcsine distribution is a zero order Bessel function of the first kind, multiplied by a complex exponential, given by . For the special case of , the characteristic function takes the form of .
^Overturf, Drew; et al. (2017). Investigation of beamforming patterns from volumetrically distributed phased arrays. MILCOM 2017 - 2017 IEEE Military Communications Conference (MILCOM). pp. 817–822. doi:10.1109/MILCOM.2017.8170756. ISBN978-1-5386-0595-0.
^Buchanan, K.; et al. (2020). "Null Beamsteering Using Distributed Arrays and Shared Aperture Distributions". IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation. 68 (7): 5353–5364. Bibcode:2020ITAP...68.5353B. doi:10.1109/TAP.2020.2978887.