In 1761, the German demographer Johann Peter Süßmilch published a simple population growth model that starts with a couple, in the eighth chapter of his book "Die göttliche Ordnung". With the help of the Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler, he projected the population for 300 years. He demonstrated that after that time the population will be growing approximately geometrically. In this paper, the population projection of Euler and Süßmilch is reanalyzed using matrix algebra. Graphs and tables show the time series of the population and its growth rates. Age structures of selected years are presented. The solution of the projection equation is derived. It is shown that the projection model can be described by a geometric trend model which is s...
L.-B. H. Pollard J.H. — Mathematical models for the growth on human populations. In: Population, 31ᵉ...
An original mathematical model, previously tested by the authors on other non-demographic objects, i...
For thousands of years the population of Earth increased slowly, while per capita income remained es...
I present a computational approach to calculate the population growth rate, its sensitivity to life-...
The fact that up to the 1960s world population growth had been characterized by a hyperbolic trend w...
A model is set up that yields the equation followed by world population (P), past and present: P = A...
The objective of this project was to examine the dynamics of population size based on age-specific l...
In this paper we study a linear continuous model describing age structure into a dynamics of one sex...
Maine. He decided to become a mathematician in high school, when he tried to find a formula for the ...
That “a population subject to invariant age-specific mortality and fertility will asymptotically app...
This report presents an analysis of a partial differential equation, resulting from population model...
This paper presents the population pyramid dynamics model (PPDM) to study the evolution of the popul...
Leslie (1945) models the evolution in discrete time of a closed, single-sex population with discrete...
To Malthus, rapid human population growth—so evident in 18th Century Europe—was obviously unsustaina...
It is well understood that populations cannot grow without bound and that it is competition between ...
L.-B. H. Pollard J.H. — Mathematical models for the growth on human populations. In: Population, 31ᵉ...
An original mathematical model, previously tested by the authors on other non-demographic objects, i...
For thousands of years the population of Earth increased slowly, while per capita income remained es...
I present a computational approach to calculate the population growth rate, its sensitivity to life-...
The fact that up to the 1960s world population growth had been characterized by a hyperbolic trend w...
A model is set up that yields the equation followed by world population (P), past and present: P = A...
The objective of this project was to examine the dynamics of population size based on age-specific l...
In this paper we study a linear continuous model describing age structure into a dynamics of one sex...
Maine. He decided to become a mathematician in high school, when he tried to find a formula for the ...
That “a population subject to invariant age-specific mortality and fertility will asymptotically app...
This report presents an analysis of a partial differential equation, resulting from population model...
This paper presents the population pyramid dynamics model (PPDM) to study the evolution of the popul...
Leslie (1945) models the evolution in discrete time of a closed, single-sex population with discrete...
To Malthus, rapid human population growth—so evident in 18th Century Europe—was obviously unsustaina...
It is well understood that populations cannot grow without bound and that it is competition between ...
L.-B. H. Pollard J.H. — Mathematical models for the growth on human populations. In: Population, 31ᵉ...
An original mathematical model, previously tested by the authors on other non-demographic objects, i...
For thousands of years the population of Earth increased slowly, while per capita income remained es...