Questions are valid on any Stack Exchange site where they are on-topic. They can be on-topic on more than one site in which case the questioner can ask them at any one of them.
However, even in that case, depending on the number and proficiency of the audience in each Stack Exchange site, the probabilities for getting an answer that solves the problem will be different.
Is this question on-topic on Stack Overflow?
At first glance, the question looks like a "why isn't this code working"-type of question where it is actually unclear if this code is working and the emphasis is on the code doing the right thing.
As such they must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Questions without a clear problem statement are not useful to other readers.
In this case it is not really clear what the desired behavior is. "am I implementing the noise correctly?" cannot be answered without specifying what correct noise would be? Some statements about the noise are given, but without knowing the underlying physical/mathematical model, the given information is (or may, I'm not certain actually) not sufficient to determine what would be the correct noise in the mathematical model used here, and therefore I tend to say that the question might be off-topic on Stack Overflow.
Basically when asking "Is this the proper way" you should have made clear what the proper way would be in theory and then ask about an implementation. The asker didn't make it clear enough what the proper way in theory would be, at least to me.
An indication of the missing information in the question is also the beginning of the first answer "You appear to be using".
Another indication is that the questioner is not even sure if the code is working or not. If he would know what to expect he could check against the results of this code and would probably know (at least for some parameter sets).
"I only use the Gaussian random number y1, I do not need y2." is another hint that something is wrong. How can anyone else know which variables are needed or not needed without knowing the full mathematical model that is behind the code?
If the missing information would be given, the question would be on-topic on Stack Overflow (check of an implementation of a working problem) but might also be on-topic for example on the Code Review Stack Exchange site.
If the missing information about the model is actually the problem a mathematics or computer science related Stack Exchange might be on-topic.
It depends on what the problem really is here.