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Consider a particle undergoing Brownian motion in $\mathbb{R}^n$, starting at the origin, and let $B(t)$ denote its position at time $t$. Let $X$ be an arbitrary subset of $\mathbb{R}^n$. I am trying to understand what properties $X$ needs to have so that the probability of the Brownian particle striking $X$ within time $t$ is non-zero, that is, $\mathbb{P}(B(s) \in X, s \leq t) \neq 0$. It seems to me that a sufficient condition on $X$ could be that it contains a subset $Y$ which is homeomorphic to $\mathbb{R}^{n - 1}$. Is this necessary too? Is there a more relaxed sufficient condition? Thanks in advance.

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  • $\begingroup$ @SebastianGoette: he asked "within time $t$", not "at time $t$" $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 16, 2016 at 12:38
  • $\begingroup$ @SergueiPopov Oops. So we would need a different condition, like some lower Hausdorff measure to be nonzero. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 16, 2016 at 12:53

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It's not that simple. See about polar/nonpolar points/sets e.g. in http://wiki.math.toronto.edu/TorontoMathWiki/index.php/Brownian_Motion_and_Harmonic_functions

If I remember correctly, a set is not polar iff it has positive capacity (w.r.t. logarithmic potential in two dimensions, and Newton potential for $d\geq 3$).

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks for your answer. So, for example, if $X$ is an open subset of $S^{n - 1}$, it is non-polar, correct? $\endgroup$
    – user85355
    Commented Jan 16, 2016 at 13:34
  • $\begingroup$ Yes, that's correct. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 16, 2016 at 13:55
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Serguei Popov has the "right" answer. Just to give a quick counterexample, consider the set $X = (\mathbb{R} \setminus \mathbb{Q})^n$ of points with all coordinates irrational. For every $s$ we have $\mathbb{P}(B(s) \in X) = 1$, so we strike $X$ almost immediately, almost surely. Yet $X$ is totally disconnected so it doesn't even contain a homeomorphic copy of $\mathbb{R}^1$. So your sufficient condition is certainly not necessary.

Also, I wanted to comment on one technical point. You say $X$ is an "arbitrary" subset, but for the question to make sense, you really need $X$ to be Borel. Even then it is not trivial to see that your "event" $A = \{\exists s \le t : B(s) \in X\}$ is measurable, since the $\exists$ makes it an uncountable union. But you can show it as follows: let our sample space $\Omega$ be the path space $C([0,\infty), \mathbb{R}^n)$ which is standard Borel. Then the set $C = \{(\omega, t) : \omega(t) \in X\} \subset \Omega \times [0,\infty)$ is Borel as soon as $X$ is. And $A$ is the projection of $C$ onto the first coordinate, so $A$ is analytic, and analytic sets are universally measurable.

You might also like to look up the debut theorem, which states that $\tau_X = \inf\{t : B(t) \in X\}$ is a stopping time for any Borel set $X$. Again, because of measurability considerations, this is a nontrivial theorem.

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