Orion GN&C Fault Management System Verification: Scope And MethodologyIn order to ensure long-term ability to meet mission goals and to provide for the safety of the public, ground personnel, and any crew members, nearly all spacecraft include a fault management (FM) system. For a manned vehicle such as Orion, the safety of the crew is of paramount importance. The goal of the Orion Guidance, Navigation and Control (GN&C) fault management system is to detect, isolate, and respond to faults before they can result in harm to the human crew or loss of the spacecraft. Verification of fault management/fault protection capability is challenging due to the large number of possible faults in a complex spacecraft, the inherent unpredictability of faults, the complexity of interactions among the various spacecraft components, and the inability to easily quantify human reactions to failure scenarios. The Orion GN&C Fault Detection, Isolation, and Recovery (FDIR) team has developed a methodology for bounding the scope of FM system verification while ensuring sufficient coverage of the failure space and providing high confidence that the fault management system meets all safety requirements. The methodology utilizes a swarm search algorithm to identify failure cases that can result in catastrophic loss of the crew or the vehicle and rare event sequential Monte Carlo to verify safety and FDIR performance requirements.
Document ID
20160001200
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Brown, Denise (Odyssey Space Research, LLC Houston, TX, United States)
Weiler, David (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Flanary, Ronald (Odyssey Space Research, LLC Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
January 27, 2016
Publication Date
February 5, 2016
Subject Category
Space Transportation And SafetyQuality Assurance And Reliability