DocumentCode :
2548763
Title :
Impact of integrated vehicle health management (IVHM) technologies on ground operations for reusable launch vehicles (RLVs) and spacecraft
Author :
Fox, Jack J. ; Glass, B.J.
Author_Institution :
NASA Kennedy Space Center, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
2000
fDate :
2000
Firstpage :
179
Abstract :
Incorporation of Integrated Vehicle Health Management (IVHM) technologies into launch vehicle and spacecraft designs offers the potential for significant savings in operations costs. IVHM has three basic objectives. First is more autonomous operation in flight and on the ground, which directly translates to reduced workload on the ground controller team through reduction of raw vehicle data into “health summary information.” Next is reduced ground processing of reusable vehicles due to more performance of system health checks in flight rather than back on the ground as well as more automated ground servicing and checkout. Lastly is enhanced vehicle safety and reliability due to increased capability to monitor system health using modern sensing systems inside even the harsh environment of an engine combustion chamber as well as through prediction of pending failures. The “integrated” piece of IVHM is the total integration of flight and ground IVHM elements. The three elements of flight IVHM are advanced light weight/low power sensors, extensive real-time data processing and analysis and distributed data acquisition architecture with high-density mass storage. The two elements of ground IVHM are evolved control room architectures with advanced applications and automated ground processing systems. The status of current flight experiments on the Space Shuttle, Deep Space-1, X-33, X-34 and X-37 is presented
Keywords :
aerospace computing; computerised monitoring; condition monitoring; ground support systems; maintenance engineering; real-time systems; reliability; safety systems; space vehicle electronics; Deep Space-1; RLV; Space Shuttle; X-33; X-34; X-37; automated ground servicing; autonomous operation; control room architectures; distributed data acquisition architecture; distributed instrumentation system; fiber optic communication; ground operations; harsh environments; high-density mass storage; in flight system health checks; integrated vehicle health management technologies; light weight sensors; low power sensors; monitor system health; operations costs; pending failures prediction; real-time data processing; reusable launch vehicles; sensing systems; spacecraft; system health diagnostic algorithms; vehicle reliability; vehicle safety; Automatic control; Control systems; Costs; Land vehicles; Mobile robots; Remotely operated vehicles; Road vehicles; Space technology; Space vehicles; Technology management;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference Proceedings, 2000 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
ISSN :
1095-323X
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5846-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2000.878223
Filename :
878223
Link To Document :
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