DocumentCode
1817134
Title
Autonomicity of NASA Missions
Author
Rouff, Christopher ; Hinchey, Michael ; Rash, James ; Truszkowski, Walter ; Sterritt, Roy
Author_Institution
SAIC, Adv. Concepts B.U., McLean, VA
fYear
2005
fDate
13-16 June 2005
Firstpage
387
Lastpage
388
Abstract
NASA increasingly relies on autonomous systems concepts, not only in the mission control centers on the ground, but also on spacecraft, on rovers and other assets on extraterrestrial bodies. Space missions lacking autonomy will be unable to achieve the full range of advanced mission objectives, given that human control under dynamic environmental conditions will not be feasible, due in part, to the unavoidably high signal propagation latency and constrained data rates of mission communications links. While autonomy cost-effectively supports mission goals, autonomicity supports survivability of remote missions, especially when human tending is not feasible. As such, not only are Autonomous concepts but also Autonomicity concepts required to be brought to bear on future space missions - self-governance and self-management
Keywords
aerospace computing; aerospace control; planetary rovers; NASA mission autonomicity; autonomous systems; dynamic environmental conditions; extraterrestrial bodies; mission communications links; mission control center; remote missions; self-governance; self-management; signal propagation latency; space missions; space rovers; spacecraft; Automatic control; Communication system control; Costs; Humans; Instruments; NASA; Orbital robotics; Satellite broadcasting; Space missions; Space vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Autonomic Computing, 2005. ICAC 2005. Proceedings. Second International Conference on
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN
0-7965-2276-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICAC.2005.15
Filename
1498108
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