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Lanchester's laws

Lanchester's laws are mathematical formulae for calculating the relative strengths of military forces. The Lanchester equations are differential equations describing the time dependence of two armies' strengths A and B as a function of time, with the function depending only on A and B.[1][2]

In 1915 and 1916 during World War I, M. Osipov[3]: vii–viii  and Frederick Lanchester independently devised a series of differential equations to demonstrate the power relationships between opposing forces.[4] Among these are what is known as Lanchester's linear law (for ancient combat) and Lanchester's square law (for modern combat with long-range weapons such as firearms).

As of 2017 modified variations of the Lanchester equations continue to form the basis of analysis in many of the US Army’s combat simulations,[5] and in 2016 a RAND Corporation report examined by these laws the probable outcome in the event of a Russian invasion into the Baltic nations of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.[6]

Lanchester's linear law edit

For ancient combat, between phalanxes of soldiers with spears for example, one soldier could only ever fight exactly one other soldier at a time. If each soldier kills, and is killed by, exactly one other, then the number of soldiers remaining at the end of the battle is simply the difference between the larger army and the smaller, assuming identical weapons.

The linear law also applies to unaimed fire into an enemy-occupied area. The rate of attrition depends on the density of the available targets in the target area as well as the number of weapons shooting. If two forces, occupying the same land area and using the same weapons, shoot randomly into the same target area, they will both suffer the same rate and number of casualties, until the smaller force is eventually eliminated: the greater probability of any one shot hitting the larger force is balanced by the greater number of shots directed at the smaller force.

Lanchester's square law edit

Lanchester's square law is also known as the N-square law.

Description edit

 
Idealized simulation of two forces damaging each other neglecting all other circumstances than the 1) Size of army 2) Rate of damaging. The picture illustrates the principle of Lanchester's square law.

With firearms engaging each other directly with aimed shooting from a distance, they can attack multiple targets and can receive fire from multiple directions. The rate of attrition now depends only on the number of weapons shooting. Lanchester determined that the power of such a force is proportional not to the number of units it has, but to the square of the number of units. This is known as Lanchester's square law.

More precisely, the law specifies the casualties a shooting force will inflict over a period of time, relative to those inflicted by the opposing force. In its basic form, the law is only useful to predict outcomes and casualties by attrition. It does not apply to whole armies, where tactical deployment means not all troops will be engaged all the time. It only works where each unit (soldier, ship, etc.) can kill only one equivalent unit at a time. For this reason, the law does not apply to machine guns, artillery with unguided munitions, or nuclear weapons. The law requires an assumption that casualties accumulate over time: it does not work in situations in which opposing troops kill each other instantly, either by shooting simultaneously or by one side getting off the first shot and inflicting multiple casualties.

Note that Lanchester's square law does not apply to technological force, only numerical force; so it requires an N-squared-fold increase in quality to compensate for an N-fold decrease in quantity.

Example equations edit

Suppose that two armies, Red and Blue, are engaging each other in combat. Red is shooting a continuous stream of bullets at Blue. Meanwhile, Blue is shooting a continuous stream of bullets at Red.

Let symbol A represent the number of soldiers in the Red force. Each one has offensive firepower α, which is the number of enemy soldiers it can incapacitate (e.g., kill or injure) per unit time. Likewise, Blue has B soldiers, each with offensive firepower β.

Lanchester's square law calculates the number of soldiers lost on each side using the following pair of equations.[7] Here, dA/dt represents the rate at which the number of Red soldiers is changing at a particular instant. A negative value indicates the loss of soldiers. Similarly, dB/dt represents the rate of change of the number of Blue soldiers.

 
 

The solution to these equations shows that:

  • If α=β, i.e. the two sides have equal firepower, the side with more soldiers at the beginning of the battle will win;
  • If A=B, i.e. the two sides have equal numbers of soldiers, the side with greater firepower will win;
  • If A>B and α>β, then Red will win, while if A<B and α<β, Blue will win;
  • If A>B but α<β, or A<B but α>β, the winning side will depend on whether the ratio of β/α is greater or less than the square of the ratio of A/B. Thus, if numbers and firepower are unequal in opposite directions, a superiority in firepower equal to the square of the inferiority in numbers is required for victory; or, to put it another way, the effectiveness of the army rises proportionate to the square of the number of people in it, but only linearly with their fighting ability.

The first three of these conclusions are obvious. The final one is the origin of the name "square law".

Relation to the salvo combat model edit

Lanchester's equations are related to the more recent salvo combat model equations, with two main differences.

First, Lanchester's original equations form a continuous time model, whereas the basic salvo equations form a discrete time model. In a gun battle, bullets or shells are typically fired in large quantities. Each round has a relatively low chance of hitting its target, and does a relatively small amount of damage. Therefore, Lanchester's equations model gunfire as a stream of firepower that continuously weakens the enemy force over time.

By comparison, cruise missiles typically are fired in relatively small quantities. Each one has a high probability of hitting its target, and carries a relatively powerful warhead. Therefore, it makes more sense to model them as a discrete pulse (or salvo) of firepower in a discrete time model.

Second, Lanchester's equations include only offensive firepower, whereas the salvo equations also include defensive firepower. Given their small size and large number, it is not practical to intercept bullets and shells in a gun battle. By comparison, cruise missiles can be intercepted (shot down) by surface-to-air missiles and anti-aircraft guns. So it is important to include such active defenses in a missile combat model.

Lanchester's law in use edit

Lanchester's laws have been used to model historical battles for research purposes. Examples include Pickett's Charge of Confederate infantry against Union infantry during the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg,[8] the 1940 Battle of Britain between the British and German air forces,[9] and the Battle of Kursk.[10]

In modern warfare, to take into account that to some extent both linear and the square apply often, an exponent of 1.5 is used.[11][12][3]: 7-5–7-8  Lanchester's laws have also been used to model guerrilla warfare.[13]

Attempts have been made to apply Lanchester's laws to conflicts between animal groups.[14] Examples include tests with chimpanzees[15] and ants. The chimpanzee application was relatively successful. A study of Australian meat ants and Argentine ants confirmed the square law,[16] a study of fire ants did not confirm the square law.[17]

Helmbold Parameters edit

The Helmbold Parameters provide quick, concise, exact numerical indices, soundly based on historical data, for comparing battles with respect to their bitterness and the degree to which side had the advantage. While their definition is modeled after a solution of the Lanchester Square Law's differential equations, their numerical values are based entirely on the initial and final strengths of the opponents and in no way depend upon the validity of Lanchester's Square Law as a model of attrition during the course of a battle.

The solution of Lanchester's Square Law used here can be written as:

 
where   is the time since the battle began,   and   are the surviving fractions of the attacker's and defender's forces at time  ,   is the Helmbold intensity parameter,   is the Helmbold defender's advantage parameter,   is the duration of the battle, and   is the Helmbold bitterness parameter.

If the initial and final strengths of the two sides are known it is possible to solve for the parameters  ,  ,  , and  . If the battle duration   is also known, then it is possible to solve for  .[18][19][20]

If, as is normally the case,   is small enough that the hyperbolic functions can, without any significant error, be replaced by their series expansion up to terms in the first power of  , and if we adopt the following abbreviations for the casualty fractions

 
then the following approximate relations hold:[21]
 
That   is a kind of "average" (specifically, the geometric mean) of the casualty fractions justifies using it as an index of the bitterness of the battle.

We note here that for statistical work it is better to use the natural logarithms of the Helmbold Parameters. We will call them, in an obvious notation,  ,  , and  .

Major findings edit

See Helmbold (2021):

  1. The Helmbold parameters   and   are statistically independent, i.e., they measure distinct features of a battle.[22]
  2. The probability that the defender wins, P(Dwins), is related to the defender's advantage parameter via the logistic function, P(Dwins) = 1 / (1 + exp(-z)), with z = -0.1794 + 5.8694 * logmu.[23] This logistic function is almost exactly skew-symmetric about logmu = 0, rising from P(Dwins) = 0.1 at logmu = -0.4, through P(DWins) = 0.5 at logmu = 0, to P(Dwins) = 0.9 at logmu = +0.4. Because the probability of victory depends on the Helmbold advantage parameter rather than the force ratio, it is clear that force ratio is an inferior and untrustworthy predictor of victory in battle.
  3. While the defender's advantage varies widely from one battle to the next, on average it has been practically constant since 1600CE.[24]
  4. Most of the other battle parameters (specifically the initial force strengths, initial force ratios, casualty numbers, casualty exchange ratios, battle durations, and distances advanced by the attacker) have changed so slowly since 1600CE that only the most acute observers would be likely to notice any change over their nominal 50-year military career.[25]
  5. Bitterness ( ), casualty fractions (  and   in the above notation), and intensity ( ) also changed slowly before 1939CE. But since then they have followed a startlingly steeper declining curve.[26]

Some observers have noticed a similar post-WWII decline in casualties at the level of wars instead of battles.[27][28][29][30]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lanchester F.W., Mathematics in Warfare in The World of Mathematics, Vol. 4 (1956) Ed. Newman, J.R., Simon and Schuster, 2138–2157; anthologised from Aircraft in Warfare (1916)
  2. ^ Davis, Paul K. (1995). "Lanchester Equations and Scoring Systems". Aggregation, Disaggregation, and the 3:1 Rules in Ground Combat. Rand Corporation. doi:10.7249/MR638.
  3. ^ a b Osipov, M. (1991) [1915]. "The Influence of the Numerical Strength of Engaged Forces on Their Casualties" Влияние Численности Сражающихся Сторонъ На Ихъ Потери (PDF). Tsarist Russian Journal Military Collection Военный Сборник. Translated by Helmbold, Robert; Rehm, Allan. US Army Concepts Analysis Agency. (PDF) from the original on 4 November 2021. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  4. ^ Wrigge, Staffan; Fransen, Ame; Wigg, Lars (September 1995). "The Lanchester Theory of Combat and Some Related Subjects" (PDF). FORSVARETS FORSKNINGSANSTALT.
  5. ^ Christian, MAJ Joshua T. (23 May 2019). An Examination of Force Ratios (PDF). Fort Leavenworth, KS: US Army Command and General Staff College.  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Army.
  6. ^ David A. Shlapak, and Michael W. Johnson, Reinforcing Deterrence on NATO’s Eastern Flank (Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation, 2016)
  7. ^ Taylor JG. 1983. Lanchester Models of Warfare, volumes I & II. Operations Research Society of America.
  8. ^ Armstrong MJ, Sodergren SE, 2015, Refighting Pickett's Charge: mathematical modeling of the Civil War battlefield, Social Science Quarterly.
  9. ^ MacKay N, Price C, 2011, Safety in Numbers: Ideas of concentration in Royal Air Force fighter defence from Lanchester to the Battle of Britain, History 96, 304–325.
  10. ^ Lucas, Thomas W.; Turkes, Turker (2004). "Fitting Lanchester equations to the battles of Kursk and Ardennes: Lanchester Equations for the Battles of Kursk and Ardennes". Naval Research Logistics (NRL). 51 (1): 95–116. doi:10.1002/nav.10101. S2CID 4809135.
  11. ^ Race to the Swift: Thoughts on Twenty-First Century Warfare by Richard E. Simpkin
  12. ^ FOWLER, CHARLES A. "BERT" (1 March 2006). "Asymmetric Warfare: A Primer".
  13. ^ Deitchman, S. J. (1962). "A Lanchester Model of Guerrilla Warfare". Operations Research. 10 (6): 818–827. doi:10.1287/opre.10.6.818. ISSN 0030-364X. JSTOR 168104.
  14. ^ Clifton, E. (2020). A Brief Review on the Application of Lanchester's Models of Combat in Nonhuman Animals. Ecological Psychology, 32, 181-191. doi:10.1080/10407413.2020.1846456
  15. ^ Wilson, M. L., Britton, N. F., & Franks, N. R. (2002). Chimpanzees and the mathematics of battle. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 269, 1107-1112. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1926
  16. ^ Lymbery, Samuel J. (2023). "Complex battlefields favor strong soldiers over large armies in social animal warfare". PNAS. 120 (37): e2217973120. Bibcode:2023PNAS..12017973L. doi:10.1073/pnas.2217973120. PMC 10500280. PMID 37639613. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  17. ^ Plowes, N. J. R., & Adams, E. S. (2005). An empirical test of Lanchester's square law: mortality during battles of the fire ant Solenopsis invicta. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 272, 1809-1814. doi:10.1098/rspb.2005.3162
  18. ^ Helmbold 1961a.
  19. ^ Helmbold 1961b.
  20. ^ Helmbold 2021, pp. app A.
  21. ^ Helmbold 2021, pp. 14–16, app A.
  22. ^ Helmbold 2021, pp. 18–19.
  23. ^ Helmbold 2021, pp. 17–18.
  24. ^ Helmbold 2021, pp. 20, 68–69.
  25. ^ Helmbold 2021, pp. 20, app C.
  26. ^ Helmbold 2021, pp. 21, app C part 4.
  27. ^ Lacina, Bethany & Nils Petter Gleditsch (2005) "Monitoring Trends in Flobal Combat: A New Dataset of Battle Deaths", Journal of Population (2005) 21:145-166
  28. ^ Lacina, Bethany, Nils Petter Gleditsch, & Bruce Russett (2006) "The Declining Risk of Death in Battle", International Studies Quyarterly 50(3), 673-680
  29. ^ Lacina, Bethany & Nils Petter Gleditsch, (2012) Journal of Conflict Resolution 57(6) 1109-1127
  30. ^ Lacina, Bethany & Nils Petter Gleditsch, (2012) "The Waning of War Is Real: A Response to Gohdes and Price", Journal of Conflict Resolution

Bibliography edit

  • Czarnecki, Joseph. N-Squared Law: An Examination of one of the Mathematical Theories behind the Dreadnought Battleship Naval Weapons of the World
  • Dupuy, Col T N (1979). Numbers, Predictions and War. Macdonald and Jane's.
  • Helmbold, Robert L. (14 February 1961a). Lanchester Parameters for Some Battles of the Last Two Hundred Years. CORG Staff Paper CORG-SP-122.
  • Helmbold, Robert L. (1961b). "Lanchester's Equations, Historical Battles, and War Games". Proceedings of the Eighth Military Operations Research Society Symposium, 18–20 October 1961.
  • Helmbold, Robert L. (12 May 2021). The Key to Victory: Machine Learning the Lessons of History. ISBN 9781668525289.
  • Lanchester, Frederick W. (1916). Aircraft in Warfare.
  • Niall J. MacKay Lanchester combat models, Mathematics Today, 2006, Vol 42/5, pages 170–173.

External links edit

  • "Kicking Butt By the Numbers: Lanchester's Laws", a Designer's Notebook column by Ernest Adams in the Gamasutra webzine

lanchester, laws, mathematical, formulae, calculating, relative, strengths, military, forces, lanchester, equations, differential, equations, describing, time, dependence, armies, strengths, function, time, with, function, depending, only, 1915, 1916, during, . Lanchester s laws are mathematical formulae for calculating the relative strengths of military forces The Lanchester equations are differential equations describing the time dependence of two armies strengths A and B as a function of time with the function depending only on A and B 1 2 In 1915 and 1916 during World War I M Osipov 3 vii viii and Frederick Lanchester independently devised a series of differential equations to demonstrate the power relationships between opposing forces 4 Among these are what is known as Lanchester s linear law for ancient combat and Lanchester s square law for modern combat with long range weapons such as firearms As of 2017 modified variations of the Lanchester equations continue to form the basis of analysis in many of the US Army s combat simulations 5 and in 2016 a RAND Corporation report examined by these laws the probable outcome in the event of a Russian invasion into the Baltic nations of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania 6 Contents 1 Lanchester s linear law 2 Lanchester s square law 2 1 Description 2 2 Example equations 2 3 Relation to the salvo combat model 3 Lanchester s law in use 3 1 Helmbold Parameters 4 Major findings 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 External linksLanchester s linear law editFor ancient combat between phalanxes of soldiers with spears for example one soldier could only ever fight exactly one other soldier at a time If each soldier kills and is killed by exactly one other then the number of soldiers remaining at the end of the battle is simply the difference between the larger army and the smaller assuming identical weapons The linear law also applies to unaimed fire into an enemy occupied area The rate of attrition depends on the density of the available targets in the target area as well as the number of weapons shooting If two forces occupying the same land area and using the same weapons shoot randomly into the same target area they will both suffer the same rate and number of casualties until the smaller force is eventually eliminated the greater probability of any one shot hitting the larger force is balanced by the greater number of shots directed at the smaller force Lanchester s square law editLanchester s square law is also known as the N square law Description edit nbsp Idealized simulation of two forces damaging each other neglecting all other circumstances than the 1 Size of army 2 Rate of damaging The picture illustrates the principle of Lanchester s square law With firearms engaging each other directly with aimed shooting from a distance they can attack multiple targets and can receive fire from multiple directions The rate of attrition now depends only on the number of weapons shooting Lanchester determined that the power of such a force is proportional not to the number of units it has but to the square of the number of units This is known as Lanchester s square law More precisely the law specifies the casualties a shooting force will inflict over a period of time relative to those inflicted by the opposing force In its basic form the law is only useful to predict outcomes and casualties by attrition It does not apply to whole armies where tactical deployment means not all troops will be engaged all the time It only works where each unit soldier ship etc can kill only one equivalent unit at a time For this reason the law does not apply to machine guns artillery with unguided munitions or nuclear weapons The law requires an assumption that casualties accumulate over time it does not work in situations in which opposing troops kill each other instantly either by shooting simultaneously or by one side getting off the first shot and inflicting multiple casualties Note that Lanchester s square law does not apply to technological force only numerical force so it requires an N squared fold increase in quality to compensate for an N fold decrease in quantity Example equations edit Suppose that two armies Red and Blue are engaging each other in combat Red is shooting a continuous stream of bullets at Blue Meanwhile Blue is shooting a continuous stream of bullets at Red Let symbol A represent the number of soldiers in the Red force Each one has offensive firepower a which is the number of enemy soldiers it can incapacitate e g kill or injure per unit time Likewise Blue has B soldiers each with offensive firepower b Lanchester s square law calculates the number of soldiers lost on each side using the following pair of equations 7 Here dA dt represents the rate at which the number of Red soldiers is changing at a particular instant A negative value indicates the loss of soldiers Similarly dB dt represents the rate of change of the number of Blue soldiers d A d t b B displaystyle frac mathrm d A mathrm d t beta B nbsp d B d t a A displaystyle frac mathrm d B mathrm d t alpha A nbsp The solution to these equations shows that If a b i e the two sides have equal firepower the side with more soldiers at the beginning of the battle will win If A B i e the two sides have equal numbers of soldiers the side with greater firepower will win If A gt B and a gt b then Red will win while if A lt B and a lt b Blue will win If A gt B but a lt b or A lt B but a gt b the winning side will depend on whether the ratio of b a is greater or less than the square of the ratio of A B Thus if numbers and firepower are unequal in opposite directions a superiority in firepower equal to the square of the inferiority in numbers is required for victory or to put it another way the effectiveness of the army rises proportionate to the square of the number of people in it but only linearly with their fighting ability The first three of these conclusions are obvious The final one is the origin of the name square law Relation to the salvo combat model edit Lanchester s equations are related to the more recent salvo combat model equations with two main differences First Lanchester s original equations form a continuous time model whereas the basic salvo equations form a discrete time model In a gun battle bullets or shells are typically fired in large quantities Each round has a relatively low chance of hitting its target and does a relatively small amount of damage Therefore Lanchester s equations model gunfire as a stream of firepower that continuously weakens the enemy force over time By comparison cruise missiles typically are fired in relatively small quantities Each one has a high probability of hitting its target and carries a relatively powerful warhead Therefore it makes more sense to model them as a discrete pulse or salvo of firepower in a discrete time model Second Lanchester s equations include only offensive firepower whereas the salvo equations also include defensive firepower Given their small size and large number it is not practical to intercept bullets and shells in a gun battle By comparison cruise missiles can be intercepted shot down by surface to air missiles and anti aircraft guns So it is important to include such active defenses in a missile combat model Lanchester s law in use editLanchester s laws have been used to model historical battles for research purposes Examples include Pickett s Charge of Confederate infantry against Union infantry during the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg 8 the 1940 Battle of Britain between the British and German air forces 9 and the Battle of Kursk 10 In modern warfare to take into account that to some extent both linear and the square apply often an exponent of 1 5 is used 11 12 3 7 5 7 8 Lanchester s laws have also been used to model guerrilla warfare 13 Attempts have been made to apply Lanchester s laws to conflicts between animal groups 14 Examples include tests with chimpanzees 15 and ants The chimpanzee application was relatively successful A study of Australian meat ants and Argentine ants confirmed the square law 16 a study of fire ants did not confirm the square law 17 Helmbold Parameters edit The Helmbold Parameters provide quick concise exact numerical indices soundly based on historical data for comparing battles with respect to their bitterness and the degree to which side had the advantage While their definition is modeled after a solution of the Lanchester Square Law s differential equations their numerical values are based entirely on the initial and final strengths of the opponents and in no way depend upon the validity of Lanchester s Square Law as a model of attrition during the course of a battle The solution of Lanchester s Square Law used here can be written as a t cosh l t m sinh l t d t cosh l t m 1 sinh l t e l T displaystyle begin aligned a t amp cosh lambda t mu sinh lambda t d t amp cosh lambda t mu 1 sinh lambda t varepsilon amp lambda T end aligned nbsp where t displaystyle t nbsp is the time since the battle began a t displaystyle a t nbsp and d t displaystyle d t nbsp are the surviving fractions of the attacker s and defender s forces at time t displaystyle t nbsp l displaystyle lambda nbsp is the Helmbold intensity parameter m displaystyle mu nbsp is the Helmbold defender s advantage parameter T displaystyle T nbsp is the duration of the battle and e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp is the Helmbold bitterness parameter If the initial and final strengths of the two sides are known it is possible to solve for the parameters a T displaystyle a T nbsp d T displaystyle d T nbsp m displaystyle mu nbsp and e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp If the battle duration T displaystyle T nbsp is also known then it is possible to solve for l displaystyle lambda nbsp 18 19 20 If as is normally the case e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp is small enough that the hyperbolic functions can without any significant error be replaced by their series expansion up to terms in the first power of e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp and if we adopt the following abbreviations for the casualty fractionsF A 1 a T F D 1 d T displaystyle begin aligned F A amp 1 a T F D amp 1 d T end aligned nbsp then the following approximate relations hold 21 e F A F D m F A F D displaystyle begin aligned varepsilon amp sqrt F A F D mu amp F A F D end aligned nbsp That e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp is a kind of average specifically the geometric mean of the casualty fractions justifies using it as an index of the bitterness of the battle We note here that for statistical work it is better to use the natural logarithms of the Helmbold Parameters We will call them in an obvious notation log m displaystyle log mu nbsp log e displaystyle log varepsilon nbsp and log l displaystyle log lambda nbsp Major findings editSee Helmbold 2021 The Helmbold parameters log e displaystyle log varepsilon nbsp and log m displaystyle log mu nbsp are statistically independent i e they measure distinct features of a battle 22 The probability that the defender wins P Dwins is related to the defender s advantage parameter via the logistic function P Dwins 1 1 exp z with z 0 1794 5 8694 logmu 23 This logistic function is almost exactly skew symmetric about logmu 0 rising from P Dwins 0 1 at logmu 0 4 through P DWins 0 5 at logmu 0 to P Dwins 0 9 at logmu 0 4 Because the probability of victory depends on the Helmbold advantage parameter rather than the force ratio it is clear that force ratio is an inferior and untrustworthy predictor of victory in battle While the defender s advantage varies widely from one battle to the next on average it has been practically constant since 1600CE 24 Most of the other battle parameters specifically the initial force strengths initial force ratios casualty numbers casualty exchange ratios battle durations and distances advanced by the attacker have changed so slowly since 1600CE that only the most acute observers would be likely to notice any change over their nominal 50 year military career 25 Bitterness log e displaystyle log varepsilon nbsp casualty fractions F A displaystyle F A nbsp and F D displaystyle F D nbsp in the above notation and intensity log l displaystyle log lambda nbsp also changed slowly before 1939CE But since then they have followed a startlingly steeper declining curve 26 Some observers have noticed a similar post WWII decline in casualties at the level of wars instead of battles 27 28 29 30 See also editAttrition warfare Lotka Volterra equations similar mathematical model for predator prey dynamics Maneuver warfare Petrie multiplier similar mathematical model for sexism Lewis Fry Richardson Salvo combat modelReferences edit Lanchester F W Mathematics in Warfare in The World of Mathematics Vol 4 1956 Ed Newman J R Simon and Schuster 2138 2157 anthologised from Aircraft in Warfare 1916 Davis Paul K 1995 Lanchester Equations and Scoring Systems Aggregation Disaggregation and the 3 1 Rules in Ground Combat Rand Corporation doi 10 7249 MR638 a b Osipov M 1991 1915 The Influence of the Numerical Strength of Engaged Forces on Their Casualties Vliyanie Chislennosti Srazhayushihsya Storon Na Ih Poteri PDF Tsarist Russian Journal Military Collection Voennyj Sbornik Translated by Helmbold Robert Rehm Allan US Army Concepts Analysis Agency Archived PDF from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 23 January 2022 Wrigge Staffan Fransen Ame Wigg Lars September 1995 The Lanchester Theory of Combat and Some Related Subjects PDF FORSVARETS FORSKNINGSANSTALT Christian MAJ Joshua T 23 May 2019 An Examination of Force Ratios PDF Fort Leavenworth KS US Army Command and General Staff College nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Army David A Shlapak and Michael W Johnson Reinforcing Deterrence on NATO s Eastern Flank Santa Monica CA RAND Corporation 2016 Taylor JG 1983 Lanchester Models of Warfare volumes I amp II Operations Research Society of America Armstrong MJ Sodergren SE 2015 Refighting Pickett s Charge mathematical modeling of the Civil War battlefield Social Science Quarterly MacKay N Price C 2011 Safety in Numbers Ideas of concentration in Royal Air Force fighter defence from Lanchester to the Battle of Britain History 96 304 325 Lucas Thomas W Turkes Turker 2004 Fitting Lanchester equations to the battles of Kursk and Ardennes Lanchester Equations for the Battles of Kursk and Ardennes Naval Research Logistics NRL 51 1 95 116 doi 10 1002 nav 10101 S2CID 4809135 Race to the Swift Thoughts on Twenty First Century Warfare by Richard E Simpkin FOWLER CHARLES A BERT 1 March 2006 Asymmetric Warfare A Primer Deitchman S J 1962 A Lanchester Model of Guerrilla Warfare Operations Research 10 6 818 827 doi 10 1287 opre 10 6 818 ISSN 0030 364X JSTOR 168104 Clifton E 2020 A Brief Review on the Application of Lanchester s Models of Combat in Nonhuman Animals Ecological Psychology 32 181 191 doi 10 1080 10407413 2020 1846456 Wilson M L Britton N F amp Franks N R 2002 Chimpanzees and the mathematics of battle Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 269 1107 1112 doi 10 1098 rspb 2001 1926 Lymbery Samuel J 2023 Complex battlefields favor strong soldiers over large armies in social animal warfare PNAS 120 37 e2217973120 Bibcode 2023PNAS 12017973L doi 10 1073 pnas 2217973120 PMC 10500280 PMID 37639613 Retrieved 18 September 2023 Plowes N J R amp Adams E S 2005 An empirical test of Lanchester s square law mortality during battles of the fire ant Solenopsis invicta Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 272 1809 1814 doi 10 1098 rspb 2005 3162 Helmbold 1961a Helmbold 1961b Helmbold 2021 pp app A Helmbold 2021 pp 14 16 app A Helmbold 2021 pp 18 19 Helmbold 2021 pp 17 18 Helmbold 2021 pp 20 68 69 Helmbold 2021 pp 20 app C Helmbold 2021 pp 21 app C part 4 Lacina Bethany amp Nils Petter Gleditsch 2005 Monitoring Trends in Flobal Combat A New Dataset of Battle Deaths Journal of Population 2005 21 145 166 Lacina Bethany Nils Petter Gleditsch amp Bruce Russett 2006 The Declining Risk of Death in Battle International Studies Quyarterly 50 3 673 680 Lacina Bethany amp Nils Petter Gleditsch 2012 Journal of Conflict Resolution 57 6 1109 1127 Lacina Bethany amp Nils Petter Gleditsch 2012 The Waning of War Is Real A Response to Gohdes and Price Journal of Conflict Resolution Bibliography edit Czarnecki Joseph N Squared Law An Examination of one of the Mathematical Theories behind the Dreadnought Battleship Naval Weapons of the World Dupuy Col T N 1979 Numbers Predictions and War Macdonald and Jane s Helmbold Robert L 14 February 1961a Lanchester Parameters for Some Battles of the Last Two Hundred Years CORG Staff Paper CORG SP 122 Helmbold Robert L 1961b Lanchester s Equations Historical Battles and War Games Proceedings of the Eighth Military Operations Research Society Symposium 18 20 October 1961 Helmbold Robert L 12 May 2021 The Key to Victory Machine Learning the Lessons of History ISBN 9781668525289 Lanchester Frederick W 1916 Aircraft in Warfare Niall J MacKay Lanchester combat models Mathematics Today 2006 Vol 42 5 pages 170 173 External links edit Kicking Butt By the Numbers Lanchester s Laws a Designer s Notebook column by Ernest Adams in the Gamasutra webzine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lanchester 27s laws amp oldid 1217741189, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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