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Monitoring Agents for Assisting NASA Engineers with Shuttle Ground ProcessingThe Spaceport Processing Systems Branch at NASA Kennedy Space Center has designed, developed, and deployed a rule-based agent to monitor the Space Shuttle's ground processing telemetry stream. The NASA Engineering Shuttle Telemetry Agent increases situational awareness for system and hardware engineers during ground processing of the Shuttle's subsystems. The agent provides autonomous monitoring of the telemetry stream and automatically alerts system engineers when user defined conditions are satisfied. Efficiency and safety are improved through increased automation. Sandia National Labs' Java Expert System Shell is employed as the agent's rule engine. The shell's predicate logic lends itself well to capturing the heuristics and specifying the engineering rules within this domain. The declarative paradigm of the rule-based agent yields a highly modular and scalable design spanning multiple subsystems of the Shuttle. Several hundred monitoring rules have been written thus far with corresponding notifications sent to Shuttle engineers. This chapter discusses the rule-based telemetry agent used for Space Shuttle ground processing. We present the problem domain along with design and development considerations such as information modeling, knowledge capture, and the deployment of the product. We also present ongoing work with other condition monitoring agents.
Document ID
20120003362
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Other
Authors
Semmel, Glenn S.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Davis, Steven R.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Leucht, Kurt W.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Rowe, Danil A.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Smith, Kevin E.
(NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Boeloeni, Ladislau
(University of Central Florida Orlando, FL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 2005
Subject Category
Cybernetics, Artificial Intelligence And Robotics
Report/Patent Number
KSC-2005-161
Report Number: KSC-2005-161
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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