What Is the OPP Approach to the Next Generation of Laboratory RequirementsPlanetary Protection Quality Management System NASA’s Office of Planetary Protection uses a quality-based process evaluation approach to verify planetary protection bioburden compliance over a project’s life cycle. The verification strategy shifts from a comparative direct assay approach validating hardware bioburden at a “moment in time,” to one that implements a continual quality assurance demonstration of the analytical process via established data requirements, laboratory operational, and management parameters throughout the mission’s entire assembly process. Laboratory quality-based systems and management strategies are standardized and implemented across government and industry. A standardized laboratory quality system approach increases transparency throughout the project’s life cycle and aligns planetary protection analytical approaches with government and industry practices to support both NASA and commercial endeavors. Strategies include the implementation of a laboratory quality management structure that documents and routinely validates parameters critical to experimental design and data collection, provides data quality assessment parameters, and ultimately validates that the collected data is of sufficient quality and quantity to meet the specified technical goals. Planetary protection can draw on these practices to provide a systematic process-based quality approach to support planetary protection validation and compliance requirements. Quality approaches including data quality objectives, method performance, data acceptance criteria and the associated laboratory quality management system are presented to provide an overview and framework for a planetary protection laboratory quality management system.
Document ID
20230012621
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Amy Baker (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Mountain View, California, United States)
Nick Benardini (National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
Elaine Seasly (National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
Date Acquired
August 26, 2023
Subject Category
Lunar and Planetary Science and ExplorationDocumentation and Information Science
Meeting Information
Meeting: NASA Contamination, Coatings, Materials, and Planetary Protection Workshop