Systems Engineering and Electronics

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Intercepts allocation for layered defense

Longyue Li1, Fuxian Liu1, Guangzheng Long1, Pengsong Guo1, and Yingying Mei2   

  1. 1. Air and Missile Defense College, Air Force Engineering University, Xi’an 710051, China;
    2. Chongqing Nankai Secondary School, Chongqing 400030, China
  • Online:2016-06-25 Published:2010-01-03

Abstract:

One important mission of the strategic defense is to develop an integrated, layered ballistic missile defense system (BMDS). Considering the problem of assigning limited defense weapons to incoming ballistic missiles, we illustrate how defense weapons, ballistic missiles, kill probability and effectiveness of defense (ED) are interrelated and how to understand this relationship for achieving the best allocation plan. Motivated by the queueing theory, in which the available resources are not sufficient to satisfy the demands placed upon them at all times, the layered deployed defense weapon is modeled as a queueing system to shoot Poisson arrived targets. Simultaneously, examples, of optimum intercepts allocation problems under different constraints are presented. The four theorems determine the allocation rules of intercepts to targets that maximize ED or minimize the cost to achieve a required ED.