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Annihilation Prediction for Lanchester-Type Models of Modern Warfare

James G. Taylor and Gerald G. Brown
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James G. Taylor: Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California
Gerald G. Brown: Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California

Operations Research, 1983, vol. 31, issue 4, 752-771

Abstract: This paper introduces important new functions for analytic solution of Lanchester-type equations of modem warfare for combat between two homogeneous forces modeled by power attrition-rate coefficients with “no offset.” Tabulations of these Lanchester-Clifford-Schläfli (or LCS) functions allow one to study this particular variable-coefficient model almost as easily and thoroughly as Lanchester's classic constant-coefficient one. LCS functions allow one to obtain important information (in particular, force-annihilation prediction) without having to spend the time and effort of computing force-level trajectories. The choice of these particular functions is based on theoretical considerations that apply in general to Lanchester-type equations of modern warfare and provide guidance for developing other canonical functions. Moreover, our new LCS functions also provide valuable information about related variable-coefficient models. Also, we introduce an important transformation of the battle's time scale that not only simplifies the force-level equations, but also shows that relative fire effectiveness and intensity of combat are the only two weapon-system parameters determining the course of such variable-coefficient Lanchester-type combat.

Keywords: 434 Lanchester-type equations; 449 force-annihilation prediction (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1983
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (19)

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