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Tuesday, August 28, 2018

The Rico Petersons in Spain: Searching for Robert Lusser
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Lusser's law in systems engineering is a prediction of reliability. Named after engineer Robert Lusser, and also known as Lusser's product law or the probability product law of series components, it states that the reliability of a series system is equal to the product of the reliability of its component subsystems, if their failure modes are known to be statistically independent. For a series of n components, this is expressed as:

R s = ? i = 1 N r i = r 1 × r 2 × r 3 × . . . × r n {\displaystyle R_{s}=\prod _{i=1}^{N}r_{i}=r_{1}\times r_{2}\times r_{3}\times ...\times r_{n}}

where Rs is the overall reliability of the system, and rn is the reliability of the nth component.

Lusser's law has been described as the idea that a series system is "weaker than its weakest link", as the product reliability of a series of components can be less than the lowest-value component.

For example, given a series system of two components with different reliabilities -- one of 0.95 and the other of 0.8 -- Lusser's law will predict a reliability of

R s = 0.95 × 0.8 = 0.76 {\displaystyle R_{s}=0.95\times 0.8=0.76}

which is lower than either of the individual components.


Video Lusser's law



References

Source of article : Wikipedia