Shannon number

Estimate of number of possible chess games From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Shannon number, named after the American mathematician Claude Shannon, is a conservative lower bound of the game-tree complexity of chess of 10120, based on an average of about 103 possibilities for a pair of moves consisting of a move for White followed by a move for Black, and a typical game lasting about 40 such pairs of moves.

Claude Shannon

Shannon's calculation

Shannon showed a calculation for the lower bound of the game-tree complexity of chess, resulting in about 10120 possible games, to demonstrate the impracticality of solving chess by brute force, in his 1950 paper "Programming a Computer for Playing Chess".[1] (This influential paper introduced the field of computer chess.)

Shannon also estimated the number of possible positions, of the general order of 6331 (8!)−2 (where the ! represents the factorial and the underlined superscript represents a falling factorial), or roughly 3.7×1034. This includes some illegal positions (e.g., pawns on the first rank, both kings in check) and excludes legal positions following captures and promotions.

More information Number of plies (half-moves), Number of possible games ...
Number of plies (half-moves)Number of possible games[2]Number of possible positions[3]Number of checkmates[4]
120200
24004000
38,90253620
4197,28172,0788
54,865,609822,518347
6119,060,3249,417,68110,828
73,195,901,86096,400,068435,767
884,998,978,956988,187,3549,852,036
92,439,530,234,1679,183,421,888400,191,963
1069,352,859,712,41785,375,278,0648,790,619,155
112,097,651,003,696,806726,155,461,002362,290,010,907
1262,854,969,236,701,7478,361,091,858,959
131,981,066,775,000,396,239346,742,245,764,219
1461,885,021,521,585,529,237
152,015,099,950,053,364,471,960
Close

After each player has moved a piece 5 times each (10 ply) there are 69,352,859,712,417 possible games that could have been played.

Tighter bounds

Upper, positions

Taking Shannon's numbers into account, Victor Allis calculated an upper bound of 5×1052 for the number of positions, and estimated the true number to be about 1050.[5] Later work proved an upper bound of 8.7×1045,[6] and showed an upper bound 4×1037 in the absence of promotions.[7][8]

Accurate, positions

John Tromp and Peter Österlund estimated the number of legal chess positions with a 95% confidence level at (4.822±0.028)×1044, based on an efficiently computable bijection between integers and chess positions.[6]

Lower, complexity

Allis also estimated the game-tree complexity to be at least 10123, "based on an average branching factor of 35 and an average game length of 80". As a comparison, the number of atoms in the observable universe, to which it is often compared, is roughly estimated to be 1080.

Number of sensible chess games

As a comparison to the Shannon number, if chess is analyzed for the number of "sensible" games that can be played (not counting ridiculous or obvious game-losing moves such as moving a queen to be immediately captured by a pawn without compensation), then the result is closer to around 1040 games. This is based on having a choice of about three sensible moves at each ply (half-move), and a game length of 80 plies (or, equivalently, 40 moves).[9]

See also

Notes and references

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