DocumentCode :
2794259
Title :
On using an incremental scheduler for human exploration task scheduling
Author :
Jaap, John ; Phillips, Shaun
Author_Institution :
Marshall Space Flight Center, Nat. Aeronaut. & Space Adm., Houston, TX
fYear :
2005
fDate :
5-12 March 2005
Firstpage :
4062
Lastpage :
4069
Abstract :
As humankind embarks on longer space missions farther from home, the requirements and environments for scheduling the activities performed on these missions are changing. As we begin to prepare for these missions it is appropriate to evaluate the merits and applicability of the different types of scheduling engines. Scheduling engines temporally arrange tasks onto a timeline so that all constraints and objectives are met and resources are not overbooked. Scheduling engines used to schedule space missions fall into three general categories: batch, mixed-initiative, and incremental. This paper presents an assessment of the engine types, a discussion of the impact of human exploration of the moon and Mars on planning and scheduling, and the applicability of the different types of scheduling engines. This paper pursues the hypothesis that incremental scheduling engines may have a place in the new environment; they have the potential to reduce cost, to improve the satisfaction of those who execute or benefit from a particular timeline (the customers), and to allow astronauts to plan their own tasks
Keywords :
aerospace computing; distributed processing; planning; scheduling; systems software; human exploration task scheduling; incremental scheduling engines; space missions; Costs; Engines; Humans; Mars; Moon; Space missions;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2005 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8870-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2005.1559711
Filename :
1559711
Link To Document :
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