Title :
Constellation Program Return to the Moon: Software Systems Challenges
Author_Institution :
JPL Exploration Syst. Eng., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA
Abstract :
This paper introduces NASA´s Constellation Program, which is developing new space systems for renewed human exploration of the Moon, and eventually, Mars. A selection of challenges for software systems will be introduced that arise from the special circumstances of Constellation Systems. These challenges illustrate a variety of the types of problems that must be addressed related to software quality, automation and autonomy. For example, Constellation program-level systems engineering and integration activities are tasked with ensuring interoperability, reuse, compatibility, and evolutionary upgrade of all systems. To further compound the challenges, Constellation missions represent a mixing of the human space-flight processes with those of NASA´s robotic exploration missions. These factors and others give rise to many unique and/or significantly more complex engineering than has been previously faced in the development of space systems. In this context, software reliability and safety become critical qualities for what will arguably be the most complex software systems artifact ever created
Keywords :
Mars; Moon; aerospace computing; safety-critical software; software reliability; Mars; Moon; NASA Constellation program; NASA robotic exploration missions; human space-flight processes; software reliability; software safety; software systems;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering of Autonomic and Autonomous Systems, 2006. EASe 2006. Proceedings of the Third IEEE International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Potsdam
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2544-X
DOI :
10.1109/EASE.2006.4