1.3.2 Tailoring Systems Engineering Processes in a Conceptual Design Environment: a case study at NASA Marshall Spaceflight Center's ACO
暂无分享,去创建一个
This paper provides an overview of Systems Engineering as it is applied in a conceptual design space systems department at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Marshall Spaceflight Center (MSFC) Advanced Concepts Office (ACO). Engineering work performed in the NASA MFSC's ACO is targeted toward the Exploratory Research and Concepts Development life cycle stages, as defined in the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE) System Engineering Handbook.
This paper addresses three ACO Systems Engineering tools that correspond to three INCOSE Technical Processes: Stakeholder Requirements Definition, Requirements Analysis, and Integration, as well as one Project Process – Risk Management. These processes are used to facilitate, streamline, and manage systems engineering processes tailored for the earliest two life cycle stages, which is the environment in which ACO engineers work.
The role of systems engineers and systems engineering as performed in ACO is explored in this paper. The need for tailoring Systems Engineering processes, tools, and products in the ever-changing engineering services ACO provides to its customers is addressed.
[1] H. Ellis. ms , 1998, The Lancet.
[2] Leo Fabisinski,et al. Risk Evaluation in the Pre-Phase A Conceptual Design of Spacecraft , 2010 .
[3] David Jones,et al. The MSFC Collaborative Engineering Process for Preliminary Design and Concept Definition Studies , 2011 .
[4] Damian Yanez,et al. Vdot: A COTS Tool to Optimize Aerospace Applications , 2009 .