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Space Transportation System Availability Requirements and Its Influencing Attributes RelationshipsIt is important that engineering and management accept the need for an availability requirement that is derived with its influencing attributes. It is the intent of this paper to provide the visibility of relationships of these major attribute drivers (variables) to each other and the resultant system inherent availability. Also important to provide bounds of the variables providing engineering the insight required to control the system's engineering solution, e.g., these influencing attributes become design requirements also. These variables will drive the need to provide integration of similar discipline functions or technology selection to allow control of the total parts count. The relationship of selecting a reliability requirement will place a constraint on parts count to achieve a given availability requirement or if allowed to increase the parts count will drive the system reliability requirement higher. They also provide the understanding for the relationship of mean repair time (or mean down time) to maintainability, e.g., accessibility for repair, and both the mean time between failure, e.g., reliability of hardware and availability. The concerns and importance of achieving a strong availability requirement is driven by the need for affordability, the choice of using the two launch solution for the single space application, or the need to control the spare parts count needed to support the long stay in either orbit or on the surface of the moon. Understanding the requirements before starting the architectural design concept will avoid considerable time and money required to iterate the design to meet the redesign and assessment process required to achieve the results required of the customer's space transportation system. In fact the impact to the schedule to being able to deliver the system that meets the customer's needs, goals, and objectives may cause the customer to compromise his desired operational goal and objectives resulting in considerable increased life cycle cost of the fielded space transportation system.
Document ID
20130013065
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Rhodes, Russell E.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Adams, Timothy C.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
McCleskey, Carey M.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 27, 2013
Publication Date
May 12, 2008
Subject Category
Ground Support Systems And Facilities (Space)
Report/Patent Number
KSC-2008-085R
Meeting Information
Meeting: SpaceOps 2008
Location: Heidelerg
Country: Germany
Start Date: May 12, 2008
End Date: May 16, 2008
Sponsors: European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites, European Space Agency, American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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