Abstract

Cooperative pursuit―evasion strategies are derived for a team composed of two agents. The specific problem of interest is that of protecting a target aircraft from a homing missile. The target aircraft performs evasive maneuvers and launches a defending missile to intercept the homing missile. The problem is analyzed using a linear quadratic differential game formulation for arbitrary-order linear players' dynamics in the continuous and discrete domains. Perfect information is assumed. The analytic continuous and numeric discrete solutions are presented for zero-lag adversaries' dynamics. The solution of the game provides 1) the optimal cooperative evasion strategy for the target aircraft, 2) the optimal cooperative pursuit strategy for the defending missile, and 3) the optimal strategy of the homing missile for pursuing the target aircraft and for evading the defender missile. The obtained guidance laws are dependent on the zero-effort miss distances of two pursuer―evader pairs: homing missile with target aircraft and defender missile with homing missile. Conditions for the existence of a saddle-point solution are derived and the navigation gains are analyzed for various limiting cases. Nonlinear two-dimensional simulation results are used to validate the theoretical analysis. The advantages of cooperation are shown. Compared with a conventional one-on-one guidance law, cooperation significantly reduces the maneuverability requirements from the defending missile.

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