Lets first assume $\zeta_i=0$ and ask the following:
- under which conditions $w^*$ is a stable fixed point?

If it's not a stable fixed point for noise-free case, then you won't end up with a fixed mean or stationary distribution after adding additive noise. This means $w^*$ being a fixed point is a necessary condition for ergodicity. In the case of isotropic Gaussian noise, it might also be sufficient (needs checking)

## Example

Consider 2-dimensional problem with the following covariance:

\begin{equation}
\Sigma=\left(
\begin{matrix}
1 & 0 \\
0 & 2
\end{matrix}
\right)
\end{equation}

One condition on step size $\eta=\alpha$ which guarantees convergence

$$\frac{2}{\alpha}<\text{Tr}(\Sigma)+2\|\Sigma\|$$

This equation is derived in many places, ie 3.30 in Diniz "Adaptive Filtering". This produces the following condition on step size in our example:
$$\alpha<\frac{2}{7}$$


However, this condition is too strict and larger values of $\alpha$ work. The necessary and sufficient condition turns out to be the following:

$$\alpha<\frac {4} {9 + \sqrt {17}}$$

I extend the expression above for a general Gaussian in this [note](http://yaroslavvb.com/convergence.pdf). I haven't seen anyone else derive this, please correct me if this already occurs in literature.

## General solution
For $x_i$ sampled from a zero-centered Gaussian with covariance $\Sigma$, the necessary and sufficient condition for $w^*$ to be a fixed point in a noiseless case is that

$$\alpha<\frac{2}{\rho(A)}$$

Where $\rho$ denotes spectral radius and $A$ is defined below. Let $s=(s_1, s_2, s_3, \ldots)$ be the eigenvalues of $\Sigma$, then
\begin{equation}\label{defa}
A=
2 \left(
\begin{array}{cccc}
 s_1 & 0 & 0 & \ldots \\
 0 & s_2 & 0 & \ldots  \\
 0 & 0 & s_3 & \ldots  \\
  \ldots  & \ldots  & \ldots  & \ldots 
\end{array}
\right)
+
\left(
\begin{array}{cccc}
 s_1 & s_1 & s_1 & \ldots  \\
 s_2 & s_2 & s_2 & \ldots  \\
 s_3 & s_3 & s_3 & \ldots  \\
 \ldots  & \ldots  & \ldots  & \ldots 
\end{array}
\right)
\end{equation}

I haven't found a simpler closed form expression for this, but a sequence of bounds can be derived by bounding spectral radius of $A$ with norm of $A^k$ for various values of $k$, [discussion](https://math.stackexchange.com/q/3846464/998).

I suspect that convergence to fixed point in noiseless case also implies convergence to stationary distribution in the case of isotropic additive noise. In the case of non-isotropic noise, may need to consider the ratio of $\Sigma$ and the noise matrix instead of $\Sigma$, like is done in NQM [paper](https://proceedings.neurips.cc/paper/2019/hash/e0eacd983971634327ae1819ea8b6214-Abstract.html)



## Existing results for non-Gaussian case:

It can be shown that in the case of 1 dimension and deterministic $x$, the following condition on $\alpha$ is necessary and sufficient for convergence
\begin{equation}\label{supersimple}
\alpha x^4 < 2 x^2
\end{equation}

Since we have $h=x^2$ for Hessian $h$, this reduces to the well known bound on convergent learning rate: $\alpha < 2/h$

In the case of stochastic x, the following is necessary and sufficient

\begin{equation}\label{eq:0}
    \alpha E[x^4] < 2 E[x^2]
\end{equation}

For the case of $x$ being distributed as standard normal, this gives $2/(3h)$ for the largest learning rate, three times smaller than what's allowed in deterministic case 

For the case of $d$ dimensions, the following is a sufficient condition, with $\prec$ indicating Loewner order\footnote{assumption A.6 in Bach [paper](https://www.di.ens.fr/~fbach/aistats_defossez_bach_with_supp.pdf)

\begin{equation}\label{eq:1}
  \alpha E[xx'xx'] \prec E[xx']  
\end{equation}

The right-hand side can be tightened to
\begin{equation}\label{eq:1x}
  \alpha E[xx'xx'] \prec 2 E[xx']  
\end{equation}

Bach, Deffosez2015 [showed](https://www.di.ens.fr/~fbach/aistats_defossez_bach_with_supp.pdf) that the following optimization over symmetric matrices gives sufficient condition for convergence, and conjectured it to also be necessary (Lemma 1 of Defossez2015)

\begin{equation}\label{eq:2}
    \frac{1}{\alpha} < \sup_{A\in \mathcal{S}(R^d)} \frac{E[(x'Ax)^2]}{2 E[x'A^2 x] }
\end{equation}

We can show this to be equivalent to the following positive semi-definite constraint
\begin{equation}\label{eq:3}
    \alpha E[xx' \otimes xx'] \prec E[xx'\otimes I] + E[I\otimes xx']
\end{equation}


Most recently, [Jain](https://arxiv.org/abs/1610.03774) generalized last Eq to batch sizes beyond 1 and formally showed it to be a necessary condition for monotonic convergence. When applied to Gaussian case, this is equivalent to $\text{Tr}(\Sigma)+2\|H\|$ condition derived earlier.