2308 CHAPTER 67. THE EASY ITO FORMULA
such that fk converges to f in L2 (Ω× [0, t] ;Rn,P) with f being progressively measurable.Then by the Itô isometry and the equation
Gk = E (Gk)+∫ t
0fk (s,ω)T dW
you can pass to the limit as k→ ∞ and obtain
F = E (F)+∫ t
0f(s,ω)T dW
Now E (Gk)→ E (F) . Consider the stochastic integrals. By the maximal estimate, Theo-rem 62.9.4, and the Ito isometry,
P
sups∈[0,t]
nonnegative submartingale︷ ︸︸ ︷∣∣∣∣∫ s
0fk (·,ω)T dW−
∫ s
0f(·,ω)T dW
∣∣∣∣> δ
<
E(∣∣∣∫ t
0 fk (·,ω)T dW−∫ t
0 f(·,ω)T dW∣∣∣2)
δ2
=E(∫ t
0 ∥fk− f∥2Rn ds
)δ
2
From the above convergence result and an application of the Borel Cantelli lemma, thereis a set of measure zero N and a subsequence, still denoted as fk such that for ω /∈ N, theconvergence of the stochastic integrals for this subsequence is uniform. Thus for ω /∈ N,
F = E (F)+∫ t
0f(s,ω)T dW
This proves the existence part of this theorem.It remains to consider the uniqueness. Suppose then that
F = E (F)+∫ T
0f(t,ω)T dW = E (F)+
∫ T
0f1 (t,ω)T dW.
Then ∫ T
0f(t,ω)T dW =
∫ T
0f1 (t,ω)T dW
and so ∫ T
0
(f(t,ω)T − f1 (t,ω)T
)dW = 0
and by the Itô isometry,
0 =
∣∣∣∣∣∣∣∣∫ T
0
(f(t,ω)T − f1 (t,ω)T
)dW∣∣∣∣∣∣∣∣
L2(Ω)
= ||f− f1||L2(Ω×[0,T ];Rn)