Title :
Autonomous mission operations
Author :
Frank, Jason ; Spirkovska, L. ; McCann, Roy ; Lui Wang ; Pohlkamp, K. ; Morin, L.
Author_Institution :
NASA Ames Res. Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA
Abstract :
NASA´s Advanced Exploration Systems Autonomous Mission Operations (AMO) project conducted an empirical investigation of the impact of time delay on today´s mission operations, and of the effect of processes and mission support tools designed to mitigate time-delay related impacts. Mission operation scenarios were designed for NASA´s Deep Space Habitat (DSH), an analog spacecraft habitat, covering a range of activities including nominal objectives, DSH system failures, and crew medical emergencies. The scenarios were simulated at time delay values representative of Lunar (1.2-5 sec), Near Earth Object (NEO) (50 sec) and Mars (300 sec) missions. Each combination of operational scenario and time delay was tested in a Baseline configuration, designed to reflect present-day operations of the International Space Station, and a Mitigation configuration in which a variety of software tools, information displays, and crew-ground communications protocols were employed to assist both crews and Flight Control Team (FCT) members with the long-delay conditions. Preliminary findings indicate: 1) Workload of both crewmembers and FCT members generally increased along with increasing time delay. 2) Advanced procedure execution viewers, caution and warning tools, and communications protocols such as text messaging decreased the workload of both flight controllers and crew, and decreased the difficulty of coordinating activities. 3) Whereas crew workload ratings increased between 50 sec and 300 sec of time delay in the Baseline configuration, workload ratings decreased (or remained flat) in the Mitigation configuration.
Keywords :
aerospace computing; aerospace control; control engineering computing; delays; protocols; space vehicles; FCT members; Mars missions; NASA DSH; NASA advanced exploration systems AMO project; NASA advanced exploration systems autonomous mission operations project; NASA deep space habitat; NEO missions; analog spacecraft habitat; crew medical emergencies; crew-ground communications protocols; flight control team members; information displays; international space station; mission operation scenarios; mitigation configuration; near Earth object missions; nominal objectives; present-day operations; software tools; time delay values; time-delay related impact mitigation; Delay effects; Earth; Mars; NASA; Postal services; Space missions; Space vehicles;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1812-9
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2013.6496927