Jura The idiot
General
Today at 3:25 AM you used the conditional probability:I'm not sure why you think that if a first missile misses, so will a second, and vice versa. This is patently not true. The conditions under which the first engagement misses doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the conditions experienced during the second engagement, which will be further along the flight path of the bogey towards the 055, possibly significantly further. So local environmental conditions can be excluded. If you're talking about rain or other inclement weather, then decreased Pks would apply across the board to all missiles, both inbound and outbound, and not just to a single pair of HHQ-9s or DK-10As. You're probably thinking the engagements will be nearly simultaneous, whereas more likely they will be separated by a few seconds or even a few dozen seconds. Even if they were nearly simultaneous, the Pk for the engagement is being determined by the ability of the missile's on board sensor to correctly ascertain the position of the target, which instead of being binary ("I know where it or I don't know where it is"), is distributed on a curve ("it's most likely to be at X location with a Y degree of error"), the slope of which changes millisecond by millisecond as targeting information is updated. Each HHQ-9 will have a different curve and different slope, even ones separated by only a few seconds. They won't approach from exactly the same direction, they won't be flying at exactly the same speed, they won't be attacking from the same angle, etc. It is grossly unreasonable to think that if one missile misses, the other is also likely to miss. In reality both will definitely have independent individual Pks, even if they are same type of missile and attack the target only a few seconds apart.
Incidentally Pk can never be HIGHER than 1, so I'm not sure why you pointed out that Pk is lower than 1 in this discussion.
reformulating using your numbers now,... vs vanilla missile Pks will be: HHQ-9 = 0.7, ...
... HHQ-9s would be doubly assigned to ...; of the 40 engaged by 2 HHQ-9s, 4 would likely get through (Pm = 0.3 x 0.3 = 0.09), ...
P_hit = 0.7 (of a single HHQ-9 against an unspecified incoming missile: obviously just examples here);
P_stop, the probability of stopping a bogey by firing a two-missile salvo, is
P_stop = 1.0 - (1.0 - P_hit)*(1.0 - P_hit)
P_stop = 1.0 - 0.3*0.3; P_stop = 0.91
(P_stop multiplied by your 40 incoming missiles is 36, meaning 4 leakers, as you said Today at 3:25 AM)
BUT some would tell you that a probability EACH missile hits is 0.7 no matter how big salvo you fired, in other words, P_stop = P_hit, and you would take down only 40*0.7=28 (not 36 as above) missiles;
what I had in mind Today at 7:22 AM was according to simulations I've heard of, in a salvo-firing of the type I talk about (which is sending two missiles against the same target), an increase in P_stop is SMALLER than obtained from
P_stop = 1.0 - (1.0 - P_hit)*(1.0 - P_hit)
(smaller by about 50%; in this case you would take down 32 missiles (neither the 36 or 28 above))
in plain words, quote, shooting the same stuff in a salvo doesn't that much increase your chance of hitting by such a salvo, end of quote
in real world,
How did a 30 year-old Su-22 defeat a modern AIM-9X?
on June 18 over Syria, after a Super Hornet hadn't hit a Su-24 with a Sidewinder at close range (by the way I'm guessing the vendor declared Pk of almost one for such an encounter EDIT OK this is what vendors always do), the US pilot used a different TYPE of missile (an AMRAAM ... at close range) and didn't try again with yet another Sidewinder, then another, ...
just something for you to think about on the plane over the Pacific LOL just don't miss the view of the Jiangnan shipyard because of this, so that you tell us how many aft VLS cells you saw on the Type 055
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