Impact, a Tool Suite for Crew Health and Performance System Trade Analyses and Decision Support - Status of DevelopmentMission planners, systems engineers, and clinicians that support crew health and performance face very difficult choices on upcoming exploration missions. Given that there will be a heavily constrained mass and volume allocation for a medical system on these missions, what medical capability should be manifested to minimize both medical risk and mission risk? Given that not all promising research and technology proposals can be funded, how can proposals be prioritized so that those funded research investments produce the maximum benefit in reducing overall medical risk? The Informing Mission Planning via Analysis of Complex Tradespaces (IMPACT) project seeks to answer these kinds of questions and others to support upcoming exploration missions. IMPACT enables risk-informed and evidence-based trade space analysis for future space vehicles, missions, and systems. This presentation will discuss the long-term HRP and ExMC vision for the larger ecosystem of tools, which include an updated medical database (consisting of an Evidence Library for medical conditions and a medical item database (MedID) for medical resources), dynamic Probabilistic Risk Assessment (PRA) capabilities, System Modeling Language (SysML) models, and contextual data visualizations of output data. IMPACT is the result of a multi-center collaborative effort. The trade space analyses performed by IMPACT can directly inform mission, vehicle, and habitat development by quantifying medical risk, given a design reference mission, crew attributes and a set of medical capabilities.
This presentation will update the audience on the development status of the tool suite, its constituent parts and the plans for when it will deploy as an operational product, currently scheduled for the end of FY22. Recent development successes on the IMPACT project include the ability to cluster medical resources into medical capabilities and mutually-dependent bundles, the ability to perform trade analyses on different medical sets, different DRMs, and different crew complements, and the ability to specify mission segments as periods of time assigned to one or more members of the crew during which unique mission events occur (e.g., extravehicular activities, surface operations, gravity well adaptations, etc.). IMPACT is gearing up for its verification and validation phase to compile the data package necessary for a successful Transition to Operations (TtO), per the guidance in NPR 8900.1B .
Document ID
20210026764
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
W.K.Thompson (Glenn Research Center Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
D.A. Goodenow (Glenn Research Center Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
S. Santiago (Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
P.M. Augustine (Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas, United States)
M.R. Cooper (Leidos (United States) Reston, Virginia, United States)
J.C. Orieukwu (KBR (United States) Houston, Texas, United States)
S. Ozbek (KBR (United States) Houston, Texas, United States)
A.F. Al (KBR (United States) Houston, Texas, United States)
R. Lake (Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)