Reliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks

Spacecraft fulfill a myriad of critical functions on orbit, from defense and intelligence to science, navigation, and telecommunication. Spacecraft can also cost several hundred millions of dollars to design and launch, and given that physical access for maintenance remains difficult if not impossib...

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Main Author: Castet, Jean-François
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/45871
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-458712013-05-30T03:06:05ZReliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networksCastet, Jean-FrançoisStochastic Petri netMulti-state failuresReliabilitySurvivabilityStatistical analysisFractionationSpacecraft subsystemsSpace-based networksSpacecraftInterdependent multi-layer networkAerospace engineeringAerospace engineering Technological innovationsSpace vehiclesReliability (Engineering)Spacecraft fulfill a myriad of critical functions on orbit, from defense and intelligence to science, navigation, and telecommunication. Spacecraft can also cost several hundred millions of dollars to design and launch, and given that physical access for maintenance remains difficult if not impossible to date, designing high reliability and survivability into these systems is an engineering and financial imperative. While reliability is recognized as an essential attribute for spacecraft, little analysis has been done pertaining to actual field reliability of spacecraft and their subsystems. This thesis consists of two parts. The first part fills the gap in the current understanding of spacecraft failure behavior on orbit through extensive statistical analysis and modeling of anomaly and failure data of Earth-orbiting spacecraft. The second part builds on these results to develop a novel theoretical basis (interdependent multi-layer network approach) and algorithmic tools for the analysis of survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks. Space-based networks (SBNs) allow the sharing of on-orbit resources, such as data storage, processing, and downlink. Results indicate and quantify the incremental survivability improvement of the SBN over the traditional monolith architecture. A trade-space analysis is then conducted using non-descriptive networkable subsystems/technologies to explore survivability characteristics of space-based networks and help guide design choices.Georgia Institute of Technology2013-01-17T21:52:14Z2013-01-17T21:52:14Z2012-10-30Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/45871
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Stochastic Petri net
Multi-state failures
Reliability
Survivability
Statistical analysis
Fractionation
Spacecraft subsystems
Space-based networks
Spacecraft
Interdependent multi-layer network
Aerospace engineering
Aerospace engineering Technological innovations
Space vehicles
Reliability (Engineering)
spellingShingle Stochastic Petri net
Multi-state failures
Reliability
Survivability
Statistical analysis
Fractionation
Spacecraft subsystems
Space-based networks
Spacecraft
Interdependent multi-layer network
Aerospace engineering
Aerospace engineering Technological innovations
Space vehicles
Reliability (Engineering)
Castet, Jean-François
Reliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks
description Spacecraft fulfill a myriad of critical functions on orbit, from defense and intelligence to science, navigation, and telecommunication. Spacecraft can also cost several hundred millions of dollars to design and launch, and given that physical access for maintenance remains difficult if not impossible to date, designing high reliability and survivability into these systems is an engineering and financial imperative. While reliability is recognized as an essential attribute for spacecraft, little analysis has been done pertaining to actual field reliability of spacecraft and their subsystems. This thesis consists of two parts. The first part fills the gap in the current understanding of spacecraft failure behavior on orbit through extensive statistical analysis and modeling of anomaly and failure data of Earth-orbiting spacecraft. The second part builds on these results to develop a novel theoretical basis (interdependent multi-layer network approach) and algorithmic tools for the analysis of survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks. Space-based networks (SBNs) allow the sharing of on-orbit resources, such as data storage, processing, and downlink. Results indicate and quantify the incremental survivability improvement of the SBN over the traditional monolith architecture. A trade-space analysis is then conducted using non-descriptive networkable subsystems/technologies to explore survivability characteristics of space-based networks and help guide design choices.
author Castet, Jean-François
author_facet Castet, Jean-François
author_sort Castet, Jean-François
title Reliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks
title_short Reliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks
title_full Reliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks
title_fullStr Reliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks
title_full_unstemmed Reliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks
title_sort reliability, multi-state failures and survivability of spacecraft and space-based networks
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/45871
work_keys_str_mv AT castetjeanfrancois reliabilitymultistatefailuresandsurvivabilityofspacecraftandspacebasednetworks
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