Side-By-Side Comparison of Mobile Force Modeling Methods for Operational Effects and Virtual Prototyping

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Side-By-Side Comparison of Mobile Force Modeling Methods for Operational Effects and Virtual Prototyping Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) Joint Science and Technology Office Chemical and Biological Defense (JSTO-CBD) program. Camillus W.D. Dave Hoffman, PI Scott Cahoon Sonia von der Lippe 111700 January 2007

The Mobile Forces Assessment Objective To perform a comparative assessment of the available field of models and simulations (M&S) for their analytical and modeling potential with regard to Modeling chemical and biological (CB) effects on mobile forces, Exposing CB impacts on operations, and Performing analyses of alternatives for determining optimum courses of action under various adverse CBRN conditions.

Background The assessment was fostered with a view to identifying analytical M&S tools that will be recommended for membership among the Joint Operational Effects Federation (JOEF) CBRN M&S tool suite. The intended users of JOEF are Warfighters at the three major levels of warfare Strategic Operational Tactical

Assessment philosophy Users define application requirements Application requirements drive tool capabilities requirements Everything else is secondary So Who are the users? What are their application requirements? What are their tool requirements?

Assumptions All models are wrong (imperfect); some are useful No single M&S tool will adequately answer all questions The task or the analytical questions drive the choice of M&S tool The Case of Three Rotary Wing Flight Models M M M R R R

Practical Example COCOMs worry about TPFFDL flow They need M&S that help them optimize throughput through available nodes (such as a port) and the impact and best alternative if a node is lost to a CBRN attack. Port commanders worry about port operations. Port commanders require M&S that will help them optimize port operations in the event of a CBRN attack. The optimum types of M&S for each of these applications would probably be different

Assumptions (continued) The Army and JFCOM will have the preponderance of potential mobile forces M&S tools Analytical potential requires statistical reliability The three major levels of warfare will have different questions and will probably require different tools

Approach Task Products M&S Survey Users Applications CBRN Applications (Empirical & Inferred) Capabilities Capability Requirements User Application Survey M&S Applications CBRN Applications (Empirical & Inferred) Capabilities Capability Requirements Mobile Forces Criteria Definition M&S Typing Binning Criteria Binning Prioritization Cross-walk M&S Types with Priorities Identify Mobile Forces M&S Solutions

Approach Mobile Forces M&S survey CBRN application survey Mobile forces criteria definition

Mobile Forces M&S Survey What CB M&S currently exist or are planned for development? What are their use histories? Who are the M&S proponents/owners and their clients? What services and what agencies within those services use these M&S What are their resolutions and fidelities? What CB modeling currently exists within them? What CB applications have been conducted or are projected to be conducted with them? What CB analyses are envisioned which cannot be conducted for a want of CB modeling?

Mobile Forces M&S Survey Centers of excellence (M&S and CBRN) Web Symposia (ITSEC, etc)

Approach Mobile Forces M&S survey CBRN application survey Mobile forces criteria definition

CBRN Application Survey Start with the three levels of warfare What is the scope of the M&S that are currently used? Search areas: Army centers of excellence Battalion/brigade (tactical?) TRAC-WSMR Division/corps (operational?) TRAC-FLVN Army/theater (strategic?) CAA JFCOM OSD support?

CBRN Application Survey (Continued) What are their issues and how are they examined? Then Derive notional questions on how a CBRN attack might affect those results? Look for similarities and differences Derive CBRN related functionality requirements that we can use to define classes of applications and classes of M&S tools to support them Caveat: No intent to suggest that the assessment will identify all possible application questions.

Approach Mobile Forces M&S survey CBRN application survey Mobile forces criteria definition

Mobile Forces Criteria Definition Classify applications by M&S resolution/fidelity types Cross-walk M&S with application survey Develop and prioritize binning criteria Assess M&S within M&S resolution/fidelity types by binning criteria

Initial Binning Criteria CBRN application history Resolution (individual vs corps) Fidelity (movement, sight, respiratory, etc.) Statistical reliability Ease of modeling (for rapid prototyping) Joint (Army & USMC) Resource requirements (adequate and skilled staffing)

Summary

Perceived Survey & Assessment User Space Strategic User Resources Application/ User Questions Types Centers of Excellence JFCOM CAA Operational TRACs Tactical Skills Equipment Platform/Dismounted Ind Aggregate Time Personnel M&S Types (Resolution/Fidelity/Capability)

Notional Result Binning Priority Tactical Operational Strategic Statistical Reliability M&S a M&S b M&S c M&S d M&S e M&S f x x x x x x Resource Rqts x x x x x Resolution x x x Fidelity x x x x Joint x x x CBRN History x x Ease of modeling x x x

Emerging Results There are legacy mobile forces M&S resident at Army and USMC centers of excellence that meet most critical binning criteria, but The use of M&S by Warfighter CBRN staffs is revolutionary (not evolutionary) with an inherent problem CBRN staff sections are often one or two deep Most often they do not have requisite technical skills. Categorically, they would never have enough time to prepare an M&S and analyze the output data. The above begs solutions such as Simplification of M&S use. Incorporation of existing centers of excellence or creation of CBRN center(s) of excellence resourced to support the Warfighter (similar to the DTRA HPAC paradigm)

Emerging Results (Continued) There is little tradition of CBRN M&S application analyses and resulting CBRN related modeling The above suggests that CBRN M&S capabilities need to be resident in current Warfighter mobile forces M&S analysis tools The history of CBRN analyses probably would not justify the overhead of unique mobile forces M&S for CBRN analysis

Emerging Results (Continued) In process of surveying human in the loop (HITL) M&S (Janus, OTB, etc) for analysis How are users of HITL conducting analysis and is it applicable to JOEF? Known users, TRAC-WSMR Ft Knox JFCOM? Intuitively, statistical reliability an issue HITL requires far greater resources for M&S execution (terminals, personnel, time, etc) and would appear less of a candidate for use at Warfighter HQs (COCOMs, service component commands, corps, etc)

Emerging Candidates Platform/Individual: COMBAT XXI Statistical reliability Joint Army-USMC development Tool of choice for their analysis of alternatives Aggregate: Multiple possibilities AWARS (Army) JICM (COCOM tool of choice for TPFFDL analysis)

Status User 40%, only possible to develop a set of types of applications Application/ User Questions Types Centers of Excellence JFCOM CAA Strategic Operational TRACs Tactical 30%, need to survey JFCOM, CAA 50%, need determine who is strategic. Operational and tactical identified Skills Equipment Platform/Dismounted Ind Aggregate Time Personnel User Resources 99%, good idea of Warfighter CBRN staff capabilities 90% platform, 50% aggregate, need to examine HITL M&S Types (Resolution/Fidelity/Capability)

Questions and Suggestions (collecting cards)