Abstract

The problem of optimally allocating partially effective, defensive weapons against randomly arriving enemy aircraft so that a bomber maximizes its probability of reaching its designated target is considered in the usual continuous-time context, and in a discrete-time context. The problem becomes that of determining the optimal number of missiles K(n, t) to use against an enemy aircraft encountered at time (distance) t away from the target when n is the number of remaining weapons (missiles) in the bomber's arsenal. Various questions associated with the properties of the function K are explored including the long-standing, unproven conjecture that it is a non-decreasing function of its first variable.

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