Dense formation flight with multirotor swarms is a powerful, nature-inspired flight regime with numerous applications in the realworld. However, when multirotors fly in close vertical proximity to each other, the propeller downwash from the vehicles can have a destabilising effect on each other. Unfortunately, even in a homogeneous team, an accurate model of downwash forces from one vehicle is unlikely to be sufficient for predicting aggregate forces from multiple vehicles in formation. In this work, we model the interaction patterns produced by one or more vehicles flying in close proximity to an ego-vehicle. We first present an experimental test rig designed to capture 6-DOF exogenic forces acting on a multirotor frame. We then study and characterize these measured forces as a function of the relative states of two multirotors flying various patterns in its vicinity. Our analysis captures strong non-linearities present in the aggregation of these interactions. Then, by modeling the formation as a graph, we present a novel approach for learning the force aggregation function, and contrast it against simpler linear models. Finally, we explore how our proposed models generalize when a fourth vehicle is added to the formation.