DocumentCode
1887129
Title
A software platform for fractionated spacecraft
Author
Dubey, Abhishek ; Emfinger, William ; Gokhale, Aniruddha ; Karsai, Gabor ; Otte, William R. ; Parsons, Jeffrey ; Szabó, Csanád ; Coglio, Alessandro ; Smith, Eric ; Bose, Prasanta
Author_Institution
Inst. for Software Integrated Syst., Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville, TN, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
3-10 March 2012
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
20
Abstract
A fractionated spacecraft is a cluster of independent modules that interact wirelessly to maintain cluster flight and realize the functions usually performed by a monolithic satellite. This spacecraft architecture poses novel software challenges because the hardware platform is inherently distributed, with highly fluctuating connectivity among the modules. It is critical for mission success to support autonomous fault management and to satisfy real-time performance requirements. It is also both critical and challenging to support multiple organizations and users whose diverse software applications have changing demands for computational and communication resources, while operating on different levels and in separate domains of security. The solution proposed in this paper is based on a layered architecture consisting of a novel operating system, a middleware layer, and component-structured applications. The operating system provides primitives for concurrency, synchronization, and secure information flows; it also enforces application separation and resource management policies. The middleware provides higher-level services supporting request/response and publish/subscribe interactions for distributed software. The component model facilitates the creation of software applications from modular and reusable components that are deployed in the distributed system and interact only through well-defined mechanisms. Two cross-cutting aspects - multi-level security and multi-layered fault management - are addressed at all levels of the architecture. The complexity of creating applications and performing system integration is mitigated through the use of a domain-specific model-driven development process that relies on a dedicated modeling language and its accompanying graphical modeling tools, software generators for synthesizing infrastructure code, and the extensive use of model-based analysis for verification and validation.
Keywords
aerospace computing; artificial satellites; computational complexity; fault diagnosis; middleware; object-oriented programming; operating systems (computers); simulation languages; software reusability; application creation complexity; autonomous fault management; cluster flight; communication resources; component-structured applications; computational resources; concurrency; distributed software; fractionated spacecraft; graphical modeling tools; infrastructure code synthesis; middleware layer; modeling language; monolithic satellite; multilayered fault management; multilevel security; multiple organizations; operating system; publish-subscribe interactions; request-response interactions; reusable components; secure information flows; software generators; software platform; spacecraft architecture; synchronization; Customer relationship management; Middleware; Operating systems; Security; Space vehicles; Unified modeling language;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Aerospace Conference, 2012 IEEE
Conference_Location
Big Sky, MT
ISSN
1095-323X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0556-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/AERO.2012.6187334
Filename
6187334
Link To Document