Title :
Automated spacecraft monitoring
Author :
Atkinson, David J. ; James, Mark L. ; Lawson, Denise ; Martin, R. Gaius ; Porta, Harry
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab. California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Abstract :
The spacecraft and ground systems monitoring processes at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory are described, focusing on the monitoring of spacecraft telecommunications subsystem health and telecommunications link status operations. A system based on artificial intelligence technology that seeks to overcome many of these limitations is described. The system, called the Spacecraft Health Automated Reasoning Prototype (SHARP), is designed to automate health and status analysis for multimission spacecraft and ground data systems operations. The use of SHARP during the Voyager encounter with Neptune is evaluated. It has proved to be effective for detecting and analyzing potential spacecraft and ground systems problems by performing real-time analysis of spacecraft and ground data systems engineering telemetry. Four principal areas where benefits from the use of SHARP and its descendants, namely, safety, workforce savings, reliability, and productivity, are discussed
Keywords :
aerospace computer control; artificial intelligence; computerised monitoring; inference mechanisms; real-time systems; telecommunications computing; Jet Propulsion Laboratory; Neptune; SHARP; Spacecraft Health Automated Reasoning Prototype; Voyager; aerospace computing; artificial intelligence; automated spacecraft monitoring; ground systems monitoring; real-time analysis; spacecraft telecommunications; systems engineering telemetry; Artificial intelligence; Computerized monitoring; Data systems; Laboratories; Performance analysis; Propulsion; Prototypes; Real time systems; Space technology; Space vehicles;
Conference_Titel :
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, 1990. Conference Proceedings., IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Los Angeles, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-87942-597-0
DOI :
10.1109/ICSMC.1990.142222