Title :
Management of NASA´s Earth Venture-1 (EV-1) airborne science selections
Author :
Allen, B. Danette ; Denkins, Todd C. ; Kilgore, Jon H. ; Wells, James E.
Author_Institution :
NASA Earth Syst. Sci. Pathfinder (ESSP) Program Office, Norfolk, VA, USA
Abstract :
The Earth System Science Pathfinder (ESSP) Program Office (PO) is responsible for programmatic management of National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Science Mission Directorate´s (SMD) Earth Venture (EV) missions. EV is composed of both orbital and suborbital Earth science missions. The first of the Earth Venture missions is EV-1, which are Principal Investigator-led, temporally-sustained, suborbital (airborne) science investigations cost-capped at $30M each over five years. Traditional orbital procedures, processes and standards used to manage previous ESSP missions, while effective, are disproportionally comprehensive for suborbital missions. Conversely, existing airborne practices are primarily intended for smaller, temporally shorter investigations, and traditionally managed directly by a program scientist as opposed to a program office such as ESSP. ESSP has crafted a management approach for the successful implementation of the EV-1 missions within the constructs of current governance models. NASA Research and Technology Program and Project Management Requirements form the foundation of the approach for EV-1. Additionally, requirements from other existing NASA Procedural Requirements (NPRs), systems engineering guidance and management handbooks were adapted to manage programmatic, technical, schedule, cost elements and risk. The program management approach presented here for EV-1 will set the precedent for future suborbital EV missions.
Keywords :
remote sensing; EV-1 missions; Earth System Science Pathfinder Program Office; Earth Venture missions; National Aeronautics and Space Administration; Science Mission Directorate; project management; remote sensing; suborbital EV missions; Aerospace electronics; Communities; Earth; Instruments; NASA; Schedules; Earth; Project management; Remote sensing; Reviews; Systems engineering;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2010 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9565-8
Electronic_ISBN :
2153-6996
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2010.5650883