What’s Inside:
A Quotation to Open On
Featured Article – Model Based Systems Engineering – A New Methodology or an Old One in a New Jacket?
Systems Engineering News
Upcoming Submission Deadlines and Themes for INSIGHT
INCOSE INSIGHT – April 2011, Vol 14 – Issue 1
INCOSE Webinar – INCOSE Model Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) Initiative Global Association for Systems Thinking (GAST) – Recommend Your Resources
Lean Software and Systems Consortium and the Software Engineering Institute Announce Conference Cooperation for LSSC 2011
Systems Engineering Society of Australia (SESA) to Re-affiliate with INCOSE?
Brasil to Form INCOSE Chapter
Featured Society – The Design Society
INCOSE Technical Operations – Intelligent Enterprises Working Group
Systems Engineering Software Tools News
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Whole Systems Modelling with iThink and STELLA Workshop
Dymola 7.4 Has Been Released
Atego Webinar: Keeping Control of Requirements
Intermediate and Advanced Levels in Program to Certify Practitioners of Model-Based Systems Engineering Using
SysML Now Available
Systems Engineering Books, Reports, Articles and Papers
Simulation and Modeling of Systems of Systems
Call for Papers: Special Issue on Enterprise Engineering – International Journal of Information System Modeling and Design (IJISMD)
The Ongoing Nuclear Power Crisis in Japan
Systems of Systems Safety Lifecycle
Does Data Kill Leadership? Can Systems Thinking Restore Intuition? Decision Making in Systems Engineering and Management, 2nd Edition
Verification and Validation in Systems Engineering: Assessing UML/SysML Design Models Battle Royale – Systems Thinking Versus Six Sigma! … READ MORE
Conferences and Meetings
Education and Academia
XXXIX Brazilian Congress on Engineering Education – COBENGE 2011 Open Academic Position at ENSTA Paristech (Paris, France)
2011 ESMD Space Grant Systems Engineering Paper Competition
Some Systems Engineering-Relevant Websites
Standards and Guides
ISO TC 176 – Quality Management and Quality Assurance
Some Definitions to Close On
Technology Readiness Level
PPI News
Nakhchyvan Autonomous Republic – Where’s That?
Defined Terms in SEG Hit 6000
Robert Halligan to Speak in Brasil
PPI Events
A Quotation to Open On
“If theory and practice do not coincide, either the theory is wrong, or the practice is wrong. Look at results to reach a conclusion.”
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- Robert Halligan
Featured Article
Model Based Systems Engineering –
A New Methodology or an Old One in a New Jacket?
Robert Halligan, FIE Aust | Alwyn Smit | ||
Managing Director | |||
Editor, SyEN | |||
Project Performance International | |||
asmit@ppi-int.com | |||
rhalligan@ppi-int.com | |||
Systems Engineering has been around for a long time and many of the concepts that formed the basis of the classic document centric systems engineering approach are just as valid today. Some of these are identified below:
Some Key Systems Engineering Concepts
- System levels or layers
The analytical approach to the engineering of systems starts with the top level system within its context, breaking it down into multiple lower levels or layers typically defined as system segments, subsystems, assemblies, sub-assemblies, etc.
- The Core Systems Engineering Process
The core systems engineering process is captured by the “football diagram” (Project Performance (Australia) Pty Ltd) given below. This process is iteratively applied at all the system layers starting with the top level system. The process input is therefore not miraculously falling out of the sky to start the SE process, it is the product of SE done at the next higher system level.
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Figure 1: A Basic Systems Engineering Process View
- Problem and Solution Domains
The concepts of problem and solution domains are important to understand, as working on the solution before there is a rational basis of confidence that the 5-15% of requirements that drive architecture are adequately defined, may lead to unnecessary rework. Only once the problem has been fully analysed in terms of the operational concept, context (system border and external interfaces), missions and operational scenarios (use cases); can the requirements be fully understood, can a true common understanding between all stakeholders be reached and can the solution analysis be completed to implement the high level system design in terms of behaviour, structure and associated subsystem requirements.
- System Life Cycle, Baselines and associated Artefacts, Audits and Reviews
The full life cycle of a system typically covers everything from the initial identification of the need, through the acquisition, operational use and eventually the phase-out. Various life cycle standards and acquisition standards have their own definition for the different life cycle stages. Typical life cycle processes (often equates to life cycle stages) include Concept Definition, Design, Implementation, Integration, Verification and Validation, Transition, Operational Use and Maintenance, Phase-Out. Transitions between stages have traditionally been associated with specific artefacts, reviews, baselines and audits. This has been the basis of the document centric approach to SE for decades and quite often led to the incorrect perception that SE is about generating documentation, where the real value actually lies in the layered analyses to produce the ultimate structure and behaviour of a system that will fulfil the original need in a cost effective way at an acceptable risk.
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- Common terminology
The purpose of a system is to fulfil a particular need(s) within a given context. A system has structure (physical architecture – components connected via interfaces) and for most systems, behaviour (not just functional architecture, but also temporal behaviour). The system solution description is defined by deriving, by making design decisions, solution-level functions which are allocated to the components (creating functional and performance requirements on the components), and interfaces (giving interface requirements). Components also acquire requirements by derivation solely using the physical view, typically non-functional requirements such as mass, reliability, maintainability. These requirements flow down by design through the system layers in a traceable manner.
- Requirements Documents (specifications)
Using the basic SE process applied in a layered approach in both the problem and solution domains, the requirements defining the problem and the requirements on system elements defining the solution are formulated. These requirements are then documented as a set in natural language, or some other language, given some guidelines in terms of language usage to ensure correct, concise and unambiguous requirements specification.
Why MBSE?
So if all of the above has been in place for years and the basic approach to systems engineering does not really vary if you follow the document centric approach or the model based approach, why then do we need MBSE?
One of the biggest problems in a document centric approach is making sure that the mental model of the stakeholder is transferred to the system designer accurately and in turn from the system designer to the hardware / software developer. Despite our best efforts, problems arise in the use of natural language as people interpret what they read, and draw their own conclusions given their particular knowledge and background.
Management of huge amounts of technical data in a document format is also problematic. Any old-school systems engineer will remember the effort to maintain requirements traceability and keep verification cross-references updated.
With system design data being nothing more than a collection of data elements with dedicated relations, it wasn’t long before the power of the personal computer and relational database software enabled the development of dedicated tools to capture and manage the huge amount of data associated with system development. Requirements and functional allocation can now be done by setting up links between data elements. Reporting tools enable the automated generation of documents from such a database. Determining the impact of a proposed change suddenly becomes a lot easier with the electronic navigation of these links to determine the affected components and requirements. Some of the MBSE tools also allow the graphical modeling of physical and functional architectures, which results in the complete system solution being captured in the electronic database. Paper documents need not be generated unless they are needed for review or formal approval. Even reviews can be done electronically, allowing all relevant stakeholders access to the most up-to-date data.
MBSE tools have one more added advantage and that is that the data models and graphic notations used by these tools, constrain the representation of the system design to a predefined set of engineering concepts that aids common understanding. Requirements descriptions are however still usually captured in natural language, so the same set of guidelines in terms of language usage still applies.
An Example System Description Language
MBSE requires
A methodology
A modelling notation
A model database
Based on the arguments above, the methodology for MBSE should not really be different from the paper centric approach. The core SE process is still applied, first in the problem domain to fully understand the problem and then in the solution domain for each layer of the system design.
It is with the modelling notation and the modelling database where the strength of MBSE really lies. Only one definition exists for any element of the model leading to a unique representation in the database. Any number of different views into the integrated model is typically possible. For modelling languages that are sufficiently expressive to be executable, the ability to find many
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errors very early, through execution, without building or coding anything is a huge advantage, specifically for complex or critical systems. The contribution to much more effective discovery of error via independently performed design review (the logical model describing the logic of how the physical design is intended to meet the requirements) and the contribution to understandability of how the design is supposed to work, by, e.g. colleagues, designers of the maintenance solution, are some more huge advantages.
The examples quoted below are from one MBSE tool. There are numerous of these tools on the market, some of them supporting the OMG Systems Modelling Language (OMG SysML™). The OMG SysML is a general-purpose graphical modelling language for specifying, analyzing, designing, and verifying complex systems that may include hardware, software, information, personnel, procedures, and facilities. In particular, the language provides graphical representations with a semantic foundation for modeling system requirements, behaviour, structure, and parametrics. (The Object Management Group)
INCOSE has a Tools Database Working Group (TDWG) that makes available information on commercial-of-the-shelf (COTS)
and government-off-the-shelf (GOTS) tools of interest to systems engineers. The database can be found at:
http://www.incose.org/ProductsPubs/products/toolsdatabase.aspx.
The Data Model
A database typically consists of a number of different elements, each element with specific attributes. These elements are connected by a number of set relationships, each relation also having specific attributes. This leads to a defined ontology which contributes to the elimination of misunderstandings that occur due to the different mental models people create based on their own interpretation of the model. Some examples (Vitech Corporation, 2010) of these elements and relations are illustrated below.
Figure 2: Example of Relations Applicable to Functional Decomposition
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Figure 3: Example of Relations Applicable to External Interface Definition
Behavioural View
Behavioural views into the system model enable the representation of the system behaviour within its contextual environment (problem domain) as well as the design of behaviour of the system itself (solution domain), either in the form of a functional thread that follows from stimuli to the system from the context, or the integration of these threads into an integrated system behaviour. These behaviour representations quite often include data and control flow information as well. A typical example is an Extended (including data and control flow) Functional Flow Block Diagram as given below.
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Figure 4: Example of a Functional Flow Block Diagram with Control Flows
Structural View
Structural views into the system model enables the representation of the physical architecture of the system (components and interfaces), either in hierarchical or block diagram form. Typical examples of hierarchical and physical block diagram views are given below.
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Figure 5: Example of a) Hierarchical and b) Physical Block Diagrams
Conclusion
It is clear that MBSE tools provide a host of benefits in the capture, management and representation of system problem domain and system design data. They may enable us to spend less time on the painstaking preparation of documents that was so familiar with older document centric approaches. Instead, more time can be spent on the proper application of a sound methodology in the analysis of the problem and solution domains to deliver an integrated database containing proper traceability and multiple views into the data to represent all the aspects of the system design. Management of this data is also a lot easier and the full extent of a proposed change can be assessed in a short time. Document generation is automated and can be delayed to the last possible moment for baseline approval and communication purposes.
An important factor is that the age old saying of “garbage in, garbage out” still holds true. Although MBSE tools may lead you in terms of the different data elements that need consideration, it does nothing to prevent you from following a flawed methodology and subsequently delivering a flawed design.
None of this is to suggest that documents are inappropriate. Documents using natural language remain a major means of communicating information between participants in the engineering process. We predict that they will continue to do so. However, document centric engineering? We see that model-centric and model-document balanced approaches are becoming the norm, for reasons we have described.
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Bibliography
- Project Performance (Australia) Pty Ltd. (n.d.). A Systems Engineering Process View.
- The Object Management Group. (n.d.). OMG Systems Modeling Language. Retrieved 2011
- Vitech Corporation. (2010). CORE System Definition Guide .
- Vitech Corporation. (2011). A Primer for Model Based Systems Engineering. Retrieved April 02, 2011, from Vitech Corporation MBSE Community Forum (http://community.vitechcorp.com/home/): http://community.vitechcorp.com/home/post/A-Primer-for-Model-Based-Systems-Engineering.aspx
About Alwyn Smit
Alwyn is a systems engineer with the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) in South Africa. His career of 27 years includes more than 20 years in project management and systems engineering on defence related projects. He is a long standing member of INCOSE and a Certified Systems Engineering Professional. He is also a past president of the INCOSE SA Chapter and the editor of SyEN.
About Robert Halligan
An executive professional engineer, manager and engineering practitioner, Robert is renowned internationally for his role in the practice and improvement of technology-based projects. Robert obtained his engineering qualifications at the University of Melbourne and the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, now RMIT University. After early engineering, engineering management and project management roles with Telecom Australia, Department of Defence (Australia), Rockwell International and Andrew Corporation, Robert has for the last twenty-two years contributed to major systems projects worldwide as a consultant and trainer. He is also the Managing Editor of SyEN.
Systems Engineering News
Upcoming Submission Deadlines and Themes for INSIGHT
INSIGHT is the newsletter of International Council on Systems Engineering. It is published four times per year (January, April, July, October). INSIGHT features status and information about INCOSE’s technical work, local chapters, and committees and boards. Additionally, related events, editorials, book reviews, trends, and how-to-do articles that are pertinent to the many aspects of a systems engineer’s job are also included, as space permits.
Upcoming submission deadlines and themes for INSIGHT
INCOSE INSIGHT – April 2011, Vol 14 – Issue 1
The April 2011 INSIGHT is ready to view or download on INCOSE Connect.
Lean Software and Systems Consortium and the Software Engineering Institute Announce Conference Cooperation for LSSC 2011
The Lean Software and Systems Consortium (LeanSSC) and the Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute (SEI) formally announce their technical cooperation for the upcoming Lean Software & Systems Conference 2011 (LSSC11) May 3-6, 2011, in Long Beach, CA.
Systems Engineering Society of Australia (SESA) to Re-affiliate with INCOSE?
The Systems Engineering Society of Australia (SESA) membership will vote on 3 May 2011 whether to re-affiliate with the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE), with full Chapter status, whilst retaining its status as a Technical Society of Engineers Australia.
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Brasil to form INCOSE Chapter
It is expected that Brasil will formally constitute a Chapter of the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE) in Brasil, at a Systems Engineering Day to be held at INPE/LIT in São José dos Campos, SP, on Monday 6 June. The program involves presentations on systems engineering from a number of sectors, including automotive, energy, defense, aerospace, and infrastructure. These presentations will be preceded by a meticulously researched presentation on the rich history of systems engineering in Brasil, and after a Chapter Formation Meeting, will be followed by a presentation by PPI Managing Director Robert Halligan on the status of systems engineering in Brasil and in the world.
Featured Society
The Design Society
The Design Society is an international non-governmental, non-profit making organisation whose members share a common interest in design. It strives to contribute to a broad and established understanding of all aspects of development and design, be it mechanical, civil, architectural, graphical, etc., and to promote the use of results and knowledge for the good of humanity.
The society aims to:
create and evolve a formal body of knowledge about design;
actively support and improve design research, practice, management and education; promote co-operation between those in research, practice, management and education; promote publications and their dissemination;
organise international and national conferences and workshops; establish Branches and Special Interest Groups; and co-operate with other bodies with complementary areas of interest.
The society is built on the foundations laid by the WDK (Workshop Design-Konstruktion) Society – 15 International Conferences on Engineering Design (ICED conferences), 26 major publications and more than 60 workshops on a wide range of topics.
The Design Society is governed by a Board of Management, comprising five elected members of the society including the President, Vice President and Secretary. The current President is Christopher McMahon of the United Kingdom. The members of the Board of Management are elected democratically by the members of the Society at a General Meeting, which is called every two years during ICED conferences. The Board of Management is advised, guided and supported by an Advisory Board of 27 people. This Advisory Board presently has very wide geographic representation.
Special Interest Groups (SIGs) play a major role in the activities of the Design Society. Present SIGs are:
Computational Design Synthesis
Decision Making
Design Creativity
Design Education
Design Theory
Development of Mechatronic Products and Systems
Eco Design
Human Behaviour in Design (HBiD)
Managing Structural Complexity
Modelling and Management of Engineering Processes.
The Design Society publishes:
periodic Newsletters
conference proceedings
design-related Theses
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Membership of the Design Society is open to persons with recognised design qualifications and/or experience in the fields of design research, design practice, design management, and design education.
More information: http://www.designsociety.org
INCOSE Technical Operations
Intelligent Enterprises Working Group
http://www.incose.org/practice/techactivities/wg/intelent/
Charter
Explore and demonstrate the utility of systems engineering for evolving intelligent enterprises and the utility of intelligent enterprise concepts to making systems engineering intelligent.
Leadership
Co-Chair: Americas, Steve Else, The Center for Public-Private Enterprise, Alexandria, VA, USA
Co-Chair: EMEA, Open
Co-Chair: Australasia, Susu Nousala
Contact Intelligent Enterprises Working Group (IEWG) for additional information or to join this group. The IEWG sponsors a discussion list which you are encouraged to join by contacting the IEWG
Objectives
Attributes that distinguish an enterprise and an intelligent enterprise.
Attributes that distinguish systems engineering and intelligent systems engineering
Descriptive models of IE and ISE
Tutorials for those seeking an understanding of IE and ISE
Stakeholder value realized as a function of the degree of intelligence.
Knowledge Base
Intelligent Enterprises Working Group – Knowledge Base
Systems Engineering Software Tools News
Whole Systems Modelling with iThink and STELLA Workshop
An introductory workshop for individuals with responsibility for improving organisational performance, or information specialists currently responsible for modelling using spreadsheets or other techniques.
17 and 18 May, 2011, Conyngham Hall, Knaresborough, North Yorkshire, UK
Dymola 7.4 Has Been Released
Dymola, Dynamic Modeling Laboratory, is an environment for modeling and simulation of integrated and complex systems. Dymola® has multi-engineering capabilities which means that models can consist of components from many engineering domains. This allows for models of complete systems to better depict reality. Libraries in many different engineering domains are available that contain components for mechanical, electrical, control, thermal, pneumatic, hydraulic, power train,
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thermodynamics, vehicle dynamics, air-conditioning, etc. The multi-engineering capabilities of Dymola allow users to model and simulate physical components that can be described by ordinary differential equations and algebraic equations..
Atego Webinar: Keeping Control of Requirements
Atego Exerpt Synchronizer is claimed to break down traditional boundaries between partners, vendors and customers by creating an environment for smooth requirements interchange between these stakeholders. Based on the forthcoming OMG standard for Requirements Interchange Format (ReqIF), Atego Exerpt Synchronizer is designed to tackle real-world projects and is used to automate large scale requirement exchange processes.
April 14, 2011, 08:00AM PDT / 4:00PM BST (London)
Intermediate and Advanced Levels in Program to Certify Practitioners of Model-Based Systems Engineering Using SysML Now Available
The OMG® announced that “Model Builder-Intermediate,” and “Model Builder-Advanced,” the final two examinations in the OMG Certified Systems Modeling Professional™ (OCSMP™) program, are now available. The program’s sponsors IBM®, Lockheed Martin, Sparx Systems, and No Magic, Inc., and OMG certification partner UML Technology Institute Co., Ltd. (UTI), have made construction and validation of the exams possible. For more information, please visit http://www.omg.org/ocsmp.
Systems Engineering Books, Reports, Articles and Papers
Simulation and Modeling of Systems of Systems
Edited by: Pascal Cantot, CATOD/DMT, Arcueil, Dominique Luzeaux, DGA/UMTER, Bagneux, France
Publisher: Wiley, March 2011
ISBN-13: 9781848212343
Product Description
Complex systems, and systems of systems engineering, is currently a major challenge for industry and governments, especially in areas such as defense, aerospace, telecommunications, and transportation. Modeling and simulation are very powerful tools that are used to counter some of the difficulty and complexity of these issues. This book explains the basic principles of modeling and simulation (M&S), how they can – and should – contribute to the engineering of complex systems and systems of systems and how to improve return on investment (ROI) while avoiding common pitfalls – covering, for example, software engineering aspects, ‘battlelabs’ for systems of systems (SoS) assessment, and M&S economics. It is designed in a didactic manner, and is illustrated with real world examples, lessons learned, and case studies, so that it can be understood by non-specialists such as complex systems project managers, procurement agents, or decision makers. However it will also prove very valuable for M&S experts who want to expand their knowledge of the field. While it is not designed as a textbook, it can also be a good basis for teaching the use of modeling and simulation for complex system engineering.
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Call for Papers: Special Issue on Enterprise Engineering – International Journal of Information System Modeling and Design (IJISMD)
Submission Deadline: May 15, 2011
It is the mission of the discipline of Enterprise Engineering to develop new, appropriate theories, models, methods and other artifacts for the analysis, design, implementation, and governance of enterprises by combining (relevant parts of) management and organization science, information systems science, and computer science. The ambition is to address (all) traditional topics in said disciplines from the Enterprise Engineering Paradigm. The result of the efforts should be theoretically rigorous and practically relevant.
The Ongoing Nuclear Power Crisis in Japan
An interesting ongoing discussion in the INCOSE LinkedIn group:
“The ongoing nuclear power crisis in Japan shows very clearly, in my opinion, the very essence of System Engineering mission:
it is a skill of comprehending the problem as a whole…”
Systems of Systems Safety Lifecycle
A number of standards and recommended practices define the processes and the objectives of the safety lifecycle. The civil aerospace guidance document ARP 4761 provides a comprehensive guide of safety analysis for airborne systems. ARP 4761 suggests the following activities during a system’s lifecycle: Preliminary Hazard Analysis (PHI), Functional Hazard Assessment (FHA), Preliminary System Safety Analysis (PSSA) and System Safety Analysis (SSA)….
Does Data Kill Leadership? Can Systems Thinking Restore Intuition?
Posted by Michael Dattilio
When I first got involved with helping organizations perform better, I mostly dealt with, and therefore learned from, engineers who saw everything as logical, step-by-step programs. Even now, many clients want a “process” for finding a better way to run their companies. There is a strong focus on the logical, rational and data-driven analysis of making business decisions. Yet, some of the engineers-as-leaders used what I call intuition to take companies in new directions……
Decision Making in Systems Engineering and Management, 2nd Edition
Gregory S. Parnell, Patrick J. Driscoll, Dale L. Henderson
Publisher: Wiley, November 2010
ISBN-13: 978-0-470-90042-0
Product Description
Decision Making in Systems Engineering and Management is a comprehensive textbook that provides a logical process and analytical techniques for fact-based decision making for the most challenging systems problems. Grounded in systems thinking
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and based on sound systems engineering principles, the systems decisions process (SDP) leverages multiple objective decision analysis, multiple attribute value theory, and value-focused thinking to define the problem, measure stakeholder value, design creative solutions, explore the decision trade off space in the presence of uncertainty, and structure successful solution implementation. In addition to classical systems engineering problems, this approach has been successfully applied to a wide range of challenges including personnel recruiting, retention, and management; strategic policy analysis; facilities design and management; resource allocation; information assurance; security systems design; and other settings whose structure can be conceptualized as a system.
Verification and Validation in Systems Engineering: Assessing UML/SysML Design Models
Mourad Debbabi (Author), Fawzi Hassaïne (Author), Yosr Jarraya (Author), Andrei Soeanu (Author), Luay Alawneh(Author)
Publisher: Springer; 1st Edition (November 19, 2010)
ISBN-10: 9783642152276
ISBN-13: 978-3642152276
Product Description
Verification and validation represents an important process used for the quality assessment of engineered systems and their compliance with the requirements established at the beginning of or during the development cycle.
Debbabi and his coauthors investigate methodologies and techniques that can be employed for the automatic verification and validation of systems engineering design models expressed in standardized modeling languages. Their presentation includes a bird’s eye view of the most prominent modeling languages for software and systems engineering, namely the Unified Modeling Language (UML) and the more recent Systems Modeling Language (SysML). Moreover, it elaborates on a number of quantitative and qualitative techniques that synergistically combine automatic verification techniques, program analysis, and software engineering quantitative methods applicable to design models described in these modeling languages. Each of these techniques is additionally explained using a case study highlighting the process, its results, and resulting changes in the system design. Researchers in academia and industry as well as students specializing in software and systems engineering will find here an overview of state-of-the-art validation and verification techniques. Due to their close association with the UML standard, the presented approaches are also applicable to industrial software development.
Battle Royale – Systems Thinking Versus Six Sigma!
Posted by Michael Dattilio
“Seems like organizations only make room for one methodology to address problem solving or decision making. Usually, a new executive comes into the company or a current executive hears about a cure-all approach that saved another company and mandates its implementation.
You’ve been a part of this I’ll bet. And we’ve seen it. It’s going to happen again. We just don’t want you to do this with systems
thinking, which is why we want to connect two seemingly opposite methodologies, Six Sigma and Systems Thinking.”…….
Future watch – The increasing need to interface with other domains
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This interesting piece on the ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC7 Software and Systems Engineering LinkedIn space asks the question if it is not time to start thinking about standards, particularly process standards, as components in larger systems to facilitate the interfacing between application domains.
RUSI – Enterprise Architecture and Systems Thinking: Realising Capability
Nic Plum outlines the similarities between systems-thinking and enterprise architecture and how Enterprise Architecture creates a lasting and living account of why a system is being acquired and how best to integrate it.
Conferences and Meetings
17th International Conference on Information and Software Technologies
April 27th – 29th, 2011, Kaunas, Lithuania
Second Annual West Point Critical Infrastructure Symposium
April 29 – 30, 2011, The United States Military Academy in Newark, NJ, USA
SETE 2011 – Systems Engineering and T&E
May 2-4, 2011, Rydges Lakeside, Canberra, Australia
System Dynamics Society of India, Annual Conference 2011
May 5 – 6, 2011, Pune, India
Lean Software & Systems Conference 2011 (LSSC11)
May 3-6, 2011 at the Hyatt Regency Long Beach, CA, USA
Software & Systems Engineering Essentials
May 9-10, 2011, Frankfurt, Germany
Enterprise Architecture Conference & Expo
May 12, 2011, The Pavilion, Ronald Reagan Building, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC, USA
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Risk-Based Approaches to Major Decisions (Risk ’11)
May 13 – 14, 2011, Falmouth, Cornwall, United Kingdom
INCOSE UK Tutorial Days
May 18th 2011 – Lydiard House, Swindon, UK
July 7th 2011 – Warwick Conference Centre, Warwick, UK
International Conference on Software and Systems Process (ICSSP 2011)
(co-located with ICSE 2011)
May 21-22, 2011, Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
Sixth Workshop on SHAring and Reusing architectural Knowledge (SHARK 2011)
(co-located with 33rd Int. Conf. on Software Engineering (ICSE 2011))
May 21-28, 2011, Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
RSP 2011 – IEEE International Symposium on Rapid System Prototyping
May 24 – 27, 2011, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Karlsruhe, Germany
SPICE 2011 – The 11th International SPICE Conference Process Improvement and Capability dEtermination
30 May – 1 June 2011, Dublin, Ireland
Systems Thinking Techniques to Develop Complex Thinking Skills in K12 Education
June 3-4, 2011, Systems Thinking in Schools Institute, McMenamins Edgefield, 2126 SW Halsey St., Troutdale, Oregon, 97060
1st Brasil Systems Engineering Day
June 6, 2011, INPE/LIT, Av. Dos Astronautas, Da Granja, São José dos Campos 1758-Jd, Brasil Contact Geilson Loureiro or George W. L. Sousa for more information
Seventh European Conference on Modelling Foundations and Applications
6-9th of June, 2011, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
TTCN 3 – 10th Testing & Test Control Notation User Conference
June 7-9, 2011, Bled, Slovenia
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4th Symposium on Resilience Engineering
June 8-10, 2011, Sophia Antipolis, France
2011 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Infrastructure Systems Conference
June 13, 2011, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Security and Privacy Requirements Engineering (SPREE) Workshop
June 15-16, 2011, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
ONTOSE 2011 – 5th International Workshop on Ontology, Models, Conceptualization and Epistemology in Social, Artificial and Natural Systems
June 20, 2011, University of East London – Docklands Campus, London, UK
BPMDS’11 Working Conference
In conjunction with CAISE 2011
June 20-21 in London, United Kingdom
International Workshop on Conceptualization of Modelling Methods (CMM)
To be held in conjunction with 23rd International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE 2011) June 20-24, 2011, London UK
FM 2011: 17th International Symposium on Formal Methods
June 20 – 24, 2011, Lero, Limerick, Ireland
The 32nd International Conference on Application and Theory of Petri Nets and Concurrency (PETRI NETS 2011)
11th International Conference on Application of Concurrency to System Design (ACSD 2011)
June 20-24, 2011 Kanazawa Cultural Hall, Kanazawa, Japan
INCOSE 21st International Symposium
June 20-23, 2011 Denver, CO, USA
Swiss Requirements Day
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June 22, 2011, Kongresshaus, Zurich
INES 2011 – 15th IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Engineering Systems 2011
June 23-25, 2011, Poprad, High Tatras, Slovakia
New England Complex Systems Institute (NECSI) Eighth International Conference on Complex Systems
June 26 – July 1, 2011, Boston, MA, USA
CoMetS’11 – 2nd International Track on Collaborative Modeling & Simulation
20th IEEE International Conference on Collaboration Technologies and Infrastructures June 27 – June 29, 2011, Paris (France)
Introduction to Dynamic Modeling
June 27-29, 2011, Antlers Hilton, Colorado Springs, CO, USA
18th Annual EuroSPI 2011 Conference – European Systems and Software Process Improvement and Innovation & SPI Manifesto Implementation 2011
June 27.‑29. 2011, Roskilde University, Roskilde (Copenhagen), Denmark
SoSE 2011 – 2011 6th International Conference on System of Systems Engineering (SoSE)
Jun 27 – 30, 2011, Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A
FMICS 2011 – 16th International Workshop on Formal Methods for Industrial Critical Systems
August 29-30, 2011, Trento, Italy
ICMT2011 – International Conference on Model Transformation Theory and Practice of Model Transformations
Co-located with TOOLS Europe 2011
June 27 – July 1, 2011 – Zurich, Switzerland
15th International Conference on System Design Languages
July 5th – 7th, 2011, Toulouse, France
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55th Meeting of the International Society for the Systems Sciences, joining with KSS2011 International Symposium for Knowledge and Systems Sciences
July 17-22, 2011, Hull University Business School, Hull, UK
2nd International Workshop on The Web and Requirements Engineering (WeRE’11)
July 20-21, 2011, Paphos, Cyprus
International System Dynamics Conference
July 24 – 28, 2011, Washington, DC, USA
46th Annual International Logistics Conference and Exhibition (SOLE 2011)
August 2011
ISSEC 2011 – 3rd Annual Improving Systems and Software Engineering Conference
August 2-5, 2011, Novotel Sydney Brighton Beach, NSW, Australia
ISSC 2011 – 29th International System Safety Conference
Aug 8, 2011 – Aug 12, 2011, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
21st International Conference on Systems Engineering (ICSEng 2011)
August 16 – 18, 2011, Las Vegas, NV USA
IHMSC 2011 – International Conference on Intelligent Human-Machine Systems and Cybernetics
Aug 26, 2011 – Aug 27, 2011, Hangzhou, China
TEAR 2011 : Trends in Enterprise Architecture Research (TEAR) Workshop
August 29, 2011, Helisinki, Finland
19th IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference
August 29 – September 2, 2011, Trento, Italy
19th International Conference on Case Based Reasoning
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12-15 September 2011, Greenwich, London, UK
AVOCS 2011 – 11th International Workshop on Automated Verification of Critical Systems
September 12th – 15th, 2011, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
3rd Annual NASA Independent Verification and Validation Workshop
September 13 – 15, 2011, West Virginia University Erickson Alumni Center
International Conference on Industrial Engineering, Systems Engineering and Engineering Management for Sustainable Global Development (Joint with INCOSE SA Annual Conference)
September 21-23, 2011, Spier Hotel and Conference Centre, Western Cape, South Africa
SBMF 2011 – 14th Brazilian Symposium on Formal Methods
September 26‑30, 2011, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Second Annual IIBA Conference
October 2011, More details TBA
XXXIX Brazilian Congress on Engineering Education – COBENGE 2011
October 03-06, 2011, Himmelblau Hotel, Blumenau, Santa Catarina, Brazil
SASO 2011 – Fifth IEEE International Conference on Self-Adaptive and Self-Organizing Systems
October 3-7, 2011, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
IEEE SRDS 2011 – 30th International Symposium on Reliable Distributed Systems
October 4-7, 2011, Madrid, Spain
AGTIVE 2011 – International Symposium on Applications of Graph Transformation with Industrial Relevance
October 4‑7, 2011, Budapest, Hungary
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9th International Symposium on Automated Technology for Verification and Analysis
October 11-14, 2011, Taipei, Taiwan
ACM/IEEE 14th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems
October 16-21, 2011, Wellington, New Zealand
APCOSE 2011 – Fifth Annual Asia-Pacific Systems Engineering Conference
October 19-21, 2011, Seoul, Korea
NDIA 14th Annual Systems Engineering Conference
October 24 – 27 2011, Hyatt Regency Mission Bay, San Diego, California, USA
SSEE 2011 – Society for Sustainability and Environmental Engineering 2011 International Conference
October 24-26, 2011, Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre, Brisbane, Australia
ICFEM 2011 – 13th International Conference on Formal Engineering Methods
October 25 – 28, 2011, Durham, United Kingdom
CEBM 2011 – 2011 International Conference on Engineering and Business Management (CEBM2011)
Oct 28 – 30, 2011, Shanghai, China
IIBA 2011 Conference
Oct 30 – Nov 3, 2011, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA
21st Annual Systems Thinking in Action® Conference
October 31-November 2, 2011, Westin Seattle Hotel, Seattle, WA, USA
ER 2011, 30th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling
October 31 – November 3, 2011, Brussels, Belgium
PoEM 2011 – The 4th IFIP WG8.1 Working Conference on the Practice of Enterprise Modelling
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November 2-3, 2011, Oslo, Norway
Brazilian Society of Dynamic Systems (SBDS) Annual Conference
16-18 November, 2011, Brasilia, Brazil
Website: www.sdsbrasil.org (under construction)
ICSSEA 2011 – 23rd International Conference Software & Systems Engineering and Their Applications
November 29- December 1st 2011, Paris, France
Complex Systems Design & Management 2011
December 7-9, 2011, Cité Internationale Universitaire, Paris, France
Education & Academia
XXXIX Brazilian Congress on Engineering Education – COBENGE 2011
The most important forum for discussion of engineering education in Brazil is the Brazilian Congress on Engineering Education
– COBENGE, an annual event held by the Brazilian Association of Engineering Education (ABENG) without interruption since its founding in 1973.
October 03-06, 2011, Himmelblau Hotel, Blumenau, Santa Catarina, Brazil
Open Academic Position at ENSTA Paristech (Paris, France)
The department of Electronic and Computer Science of ENSTA ParisTech is seeking candidates for one faculty position (associate professor) in System Safety and Reliability.
2011 ESMD Space Grant Systems Engineering Paper Competition
NASA Exploration Systems Mission Directorate (ESMD) Space Grant Project invited U.S. College and University teams to submit a paper on a project related to one of the ESMD areas; Grounds Operations, Lunar and Planetary Surface Systems, Spacecraft, ,or Propulsion, using a systems engineering approach. These are the design, engineering, and research areas that are critical to the future of space exploration. The purpose of the ESMD Systems Engineering Paper Competition is to train and develop the highly skilled scientific, engineering, and technical workforce of the future needed to implement the U.S. Space Exploration Policy.
Johns Hopkins Systems Institute
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In April of 2011, a major new research initiative, the Johns Hopkins Systems Institute, was launched at Johns Hopkins University (JHU). This interdisciplinary research facility, based in JHU’s Whiting School of Engineering, will include faculty from across the university.
The Systems Institute will take a multidisciplinary approach to re-engineering entire systems of national importance, including medicine, health care delivery, network-enabled systems, information security, national infrastructure, and education. In addition to engineering faculty, the institute will tap into the expertise of researchers from the university’s three health professions schools, Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing; from the schools of Arts and Sciences, Business and Education; and from JHU’s Applied Physics Laboratory, already one of the nation’s leading centers of systems engineering.
Some Systems Engineering-Relevant Websites
The Applied Systems Thinking (ASysT) Institute is a collaborative endeavor of Analytic Services Inc. The mission of ASysT is to advance the application of systems thinking principles in the fields of national security, homeland security, intelligence, energy, environment, education, and healthcare.
http://www.cognitivesystemsdesign.net
A cognitive system is a thinking (or intelligent) information system. However, the enhanced intelligence is not generated by the activity of intelligent technological functions as many in the discipline of Artificial Intelligence will want to claim, but emerges from the coordinated collaboration of distributed human agents via their interactions with each other and with functionally heterogeneous technological artifacts.
RIF/ReqIF is a standard for normalizing system specifications and requirements. Originally, ReqIF was devised to facilitate exchange of requirements between different software tools. In June 2010, the Mantis Task Force voted to adopt the Requirements Interchange Format (ReqIF) as an OMG standard. The OMG is an international standards organisation that is, among other things, responsible for UML, SysML, BPMN and CORBA standards. Following on from this, the Architectural Board also voted for the adoption of ReqIF as an OMG standard. ReqIF is now on the way to becoming an international standard.
The SysML Forum is a web community dedicated to the Systems Modeling Language (SysML), a general-purpose visual modeling language for systems engineering applications. SysML is a dialect (Profile) of the UML (Unified Modeling Language) that is customized for systems engineering applications.
http://www.sysmlforum.com/faq/relation-between-MBSE-and-other-acronyms.html
This webpage looks at the relationship between Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) and other Model-Driven/Model-Based acronym expressions (MDD, MDSE, MDE, MDA, MBE).
An Object Management Group website dedicated to OMG SysML, the version of SysML that the OMG has adopted and standardized for tool vendors.
http://www.omgwiki.org/MBSE/doku.php
A wiki dedicated to Model-based Systems Engineering (MBSE) topics, including SysML modeling. The MBSE Wiki purports to support the INCOSE MBSE initiative and the OMG Systems Engineering Domain Special Interest Group.
http://www.uml-sysml.org/sysml
An informational website in French dedicated to both UML and SysML modeling.
A website dedicated to SysML tool information, reviews, and news.
http://jbconsultinginternational.com/TechnologyReadinessLevel.aspx
A brief history of Technology Readiness Levels (TRL) is provided, along with links to various TRL Calculators.
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http://cost.jsc.nasa.gov/resources.html
This webpage provides or identifies a number of cost estimating resources, in the categories of Books, Government Reports, Periodicals, References, Software, and Technical Reports. The listing of software applications supporting cost estimation is particularly comprehensive.
The purpose of the COSYSMO (Constructive Systems Engineering Cost Model) model is to estimate the Systems Engineering effort for large-scale systems (both software and hardware). This website is the home of COSYSMO, with extensive resources and relevant information.
Standards and Guides
ISO TC 159 – Ergonomics
The ISO TC 176 website lists all the relevant information on this Technical Committee, including the following list of working groups:
Subcommittee/Working Group | Title | ||
Chairman Advisory Group | |||
TC 176/CAG | The convener can be reached through the | ||
secretariat | |||
Strategic planning | |||
TC 176/TF 1 | The convener can be reached through the | ||
secretariat | |||
SPTF: Strategic Planning Task Force | |||
TC 176/CAG 2 | The convener can be reached through the | ||
secretariat | |||
Portfolio management | |||
TC 176/TF 2 | The convener can be reached through the | ||
secretariat | |||
Portfolio Management | |||
TC 176/TG | The convener can be reached through the | ||
secretariat | |||
TC 176/SC 1 | Concepts and terminology | ||
TC 176/SC 2 | Quality systems | ||
TC 176/SC 3 | Supporting technologies |
The ISO TC 176 Business Plan describes:
The business environment of the ISO/TC
he benefits expected from the work of the ISO/TC.
Representation and participation in the ISO/TC
Objectives of the ISO/TC and strategies for their achievement
Factors affecting completion and implementation of the ISO/TC work programme Structure, current projects and publications of the ISO/TC
The work programme for each of the working groups of ISO/TC 176 is set out on the ISO website in terms of the standard or project, the Standards Development Process Stage code and the International Classification for Standards (ICS) reference.
The meeting calendar is also provided on the website.
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Some Definitions to Close On
Technology Readiness Level (TRLs)
Technology Readiness Level: TRLs are a set of management metrics that enable the assessment of the maturity of a
particular technology and the consistent comparison of maturity between different types of technology – all in the context of a
specific system, application and operational environment.
Source: European Space Agency
Technology Readiness Level: Technology Readiness Level (TRL) is a measure used by some United States government agencies and many of the world’s major companies (and agencies) to assess the maturity of evolving technologies (materials, components, devices, etc.) prior to incorporating that technology into a system or subsystem. Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technology_readiness_level
Technology Readiness Level: One level on a scale of one to nine, e.g., “TRL 3,” signifying technology readiness pioneered by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), adapted by the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), and adopted by the Department of Defense as a method of estimating technology maturity during the acquisition process. The lower the level of the technology at the time it is included in a product development program, the higher the risk that it will cause problems in subsequent product development.
Source: U.S. Defence Acquisition University (DAU) Defense Acquisition Guidebook and DoD Technology Readiness Assessment Deskbook
The European Space Agency (ESA) defines nine levels as:
TRL 1. Basic principles observed and reported
TRL 2. Technology concept and/or application formulated
TRL 3. Analytical & experimental critical function and/or characteristic proof-of-concept
TRL 4. Component and/or breadboard validation in laboratory environment
TRL 5. Component and/or breadboard validation in relevant environment
TRL 6. System/subsystem model or prototype demonstration in a relevant environment (ground or space) TRL 7. System prototype demonstration in a space environment
TRL 8. Actual system completed and “Flight qualified” through test and demonstration (ground or space)
TRL 9. Actual system “Flight proven” through successful mission operations
The Y-12 National Security Complex (Y-12), a United States Department of Energy (DOE) facility, defines nine levels as:
TRL 1. Scientific research begins translation to applied R&D – Lowest level of technology readiness. Scientific research begins to be translated into applied research and development. Examples might include paper studies of a technology’s basic properties.
TRL 2. Invention begins – Once basic principles are observed, practical applications can be invented. Applications are speculative and there may be no proof or detailed analysis to support the assumptions. Examples are limited to analytic studies.
TRL 3. Active R&D is initiated – Active research and development is initiated. This includes analytical studies and laboratory studies to physically validate analytical predictions of separate elements of the technology. Examples include components that are not yet integrated or representative.
TRL 4. Basic technological components are integrated – Basic technological components are integrated to establish that the pieces will work together.
TRL 5. Fidelity of breadboard technology improves significantly – The basic technological components are integrated with reasonably realistic supporting elements so it can be tested in a simulated environment. Examples include “high fidelity” laboratory integration of components.
TRL 6. Model/prototype is tested in relevant environment – Representative model or prototype system, which is well beyond that of TRL 5, is tested in a relevant environment. Represents a major step up in a technology’s demonstrated readiness. Examples include testing a prototype in a high-fidelity laboratory environment or in simulated operational environment.
TRL 7. Prototype near or at planned operational system – Represents a major step up from TRL 6, requiring demonstration of an actual system prototype in an operational environment.
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TRL 8. Technology is proven to work – Actual technology completed and qualified through test and demonstration.
TRL 9. Actual application of technology is in its final form – Technology proven through successful operations.
The United States Department of Defense defines nine levels as:
- Basic principles observed and reported
Lowest level of technology readiness. Scientific research begins to be translated into applied research and development. Example might include paper studies of a technology’s basic properties.
- Technology concept and/or application formulated
Invention begins. Once basic principles are observed, practical applications can be invented. The application is speculative and there is no proof or detailed analysis to support the assumption. Examples are still limited to paper studies.
- Analytical and experimental critical function and/or characteristic proof of concept
Active research and development is initiated. This includes analytical studies and laboratory studies to physically validate analytical predictions of separate elements of the technology. Examples include components that are not yet integrated or representative.
- Component and/or breadboard validation in laboratory environment
Basic technological components are integrated to establish that the pieces will work together. This is “low fidelity” compared to the eventual system. Examples include integration of ‘ad hoc’ hardware in a laboratory.
- Component and/or breadboard validation in relevant environment
Fidelity of breadboard technology increases significantly. The basic technological components are integrated with reasonably realistic supporting elements so that the technology can be tested in a simulated environment. Examples include ‘high fidelity’ laboratory integration of components.
- System/subsystem model or prototype demonstration in a relevant environment
Representative model or prototype system, which is well beyond the breadboard tested for TRL 5, is tested in a relevant environment. Represents a major step up in a technology’s demonstrated readiness. Examples include testing a prototype in a high fidelity laboratory environment or in simulated operational environment.
- System prototype demonstration in an operational environment
Prototype near or at planned operational system. Represents a major step up from TRL 6, requiring the demonstration of an actual system prototype in an operational environment, such as in an aircraft, vehicle or space. Examples include testing the prototype in a test bed aircraft.
- Actual system completed and ‘flight qualified’ through test and demonstration
Technology has been proven to work in its final form and under expected conditions. In almost all cases, this TRL represents the end of true system development. Examples include developmental test and evaluation of the system in its intended weapon system to determine if it meets design specifications.
- Actual system ‘flight proven’ through successful mission operations
Actual application of the technology in its final form and under mission conditions, such as those encountered in operational test and evaluation. In almost all cases, this is the end of the last “bug fixing” aspects of true system development. Examples include using the system under operational mission conditions.
The United States National Aeronautics and Space Agency (NASA) defines nine levels as:
- Basic principles observed and reported
This is the lowest “level” of technology maturation. At this level, scientific research begins to be translated into applied research and development.
- Technology concept and/or application formulated
Once basic physical principles are observed, then at the next level of maturation, practical applications of those characteristics can be ‘invented’ or identified. At this level, the application is still speculative: there is not experimental proof or detailed analysis to support the conjecture.
- Analytical and experimental critical function and/or characteristic proof of concept
At this step in the maturation process, active research and development (R&D) is initiated. This must include both
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analytical studies to set the technology into an appropriate context and laboratory-based studies to physically validate that the analytical predictions are correct. These studies and experiments should constitute “proof-of-concept” validation of the applications/concepts formulated at TRL 2.
- Component and/or breadboard validation in laboratory environment
Following successful “proof-of-concept” work, basic technological elements must be integrated to establish that the “pieces” will work together to achieve concept-enabling levels of performance for a component and/or breadboard. This validation must be devised to support the concept that was formulated earlier, and should also be consistent with the requirements of potential system applications. The validation is “low-fidelity” compared to the eventual system: it could be composed of ad hoc discrete components in a laboratory.
- Component and/or breadboard validation in relevant environment
At this level, the fidelity of the component and/or breadboard being tested has to increase significantly. The basic technological elements must be integrated with reasonably realistic supporting elements so that the total applications (component-level, sub-system level, or system-level) can be tested in a ‘simulated’ or somewhat realistic environment.
- System/subsystem model or prototype demonstration in a relevant environment (ground or space)
A major step in the level of fidelity of the technology demonstration follows the completion of TRL 5. At TRL 6, a representative model or prototype system or system – which would go well beyond ad hoc, ‘patch-cord’ or discrete component level breadboarding – would be tested in a relevant environment. At this level, if the only ‘relevant environment’ is the environment of space, then the model/prototype must be demonstrated in space.
- System prototype demonstration in a space environment
TRL 7 is a significant step beyond TRL 6, requiring an actual system prototype demonstration in a space environment. The prototype should be near or at the scale of the planned operational system and the demonstration must take place in space.
- Actual system completed and ‘flight qualified’ through test and demonstration (ground or space)
In almost all cases, this level is the end of true ‘system development’ for most technology elements. This might include integration of new technology into an existing system.
- Actual system ‘flight proven’ through successful mission operations
In almost all cases, the end of last ‘bug fixing’ aspects of true ‘system development’. This might include integration of new technology into an existing system. This TRL does not include planned product improvement of ongoing or reusable systems.
A reference: “Technology Readiness Levels Handbook for Space Applications”, European Space Agency, TEC-SHS/5551/MG/ap, 6 September, 2008
Project Performance International News
Nakhchyvan Autonomous Republic – Where’s That?
Constitutionally, Nakhchyvan is an Autonomous Republc on the territory of Azerbaijan. It is located in the southwest end of the Lower Caucasus. Bordered by Armenia (246km), Iran (204km) and Turkey (11km), Nakhchyvan was separated from the mainland of Azerbaijan in 1918. Since 1991, the Republic has been in blockade by Armenia. Initially without border crossings to any of its three neighbours, accessible only by air, and largely without electricity and gas supply, the people of Nakhchyvan suffered enormously. These terrible circumstances began to improve in the late 90s, with the opening of a border crossing with Iran. More recently, a border crossing with Turkey has become the major trade route for export of production by Nakhchyvan.
PPI Managing Director Robert Halligan visited Nakhchyvan in April this year, on his way to a systems engineering training assignment in Ankara, Turkey.
Defined Terms in SEG Hit 6000
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PPI’s free Systems Engineering Goldmine (SEG) provides, in addition to thousands of downloadable documents, a searchable database of definitions. The number of defined terms in March hit 6,400, and is continuing to grow almost daily. Access to the SEG is free to PPI clients and, conditionally, to others in the project community.
Robert Halligan to Speak in Brasil
PPI Managing Director Robert Halligan will speak at the inaugural Systems Engineering Day in Brasil on 6 June, 2011, on the subject “An Assessment of the Status of Systems Engineering in Brasil and in the World”. Robert’s Portuguese is not that great, so the presentation will be mostly in English.
Project Performance International Events
Systems Engineering 5-Day Course
Upcoming locations include:
Melbourne, Australia
Pretoria, South Africa
Las Vegas, USA
View 2011 Systems Engineering Course Schedule
Requirements Analysis and Specification Writing 5-Day Course
Upcoming locations include:
Adelaide, Australia
Sydney, Australia
Stellenbosch, South Africa
Las Vegas, USA
View 2011 RA&SW Course Schedule
OCD & CONOPS in Capability Development 5-Day Course
Upcoming locations include:
Canberra, Australia
Brasilia, Brazil
View 2011 OCD/CONOPS Course Schedule
Software Development Principles & Processes 5-Day Course
Upcoming locations include:
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Stellenbosch, South Africa
Sydney, Australia
View 2011 Software Development Principles & Processes Course Schedule
Cognitive Systems Engineering 5-Day Course
Upcoming locations include:
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Singapore
Adelaide, Australia
Stellenbosch, South Africa
Las Vegas, USA
View 2010/2011 Cognitive Systems Engineering Course Schedule
Requirements Engineering 5-Day Course
Upcoming locations include:
Adelaide, Australia
Sydney, Australia
Stellenbosch, South Africa
Las Vegas, USA
View 2011 Requirements Engineering Course Schedule
Introduction to Software Development Principles & Processes 2-Day Seminar
View 2011 Introduction to Software Development Principles & Processes Seminar Schedule
Introduction to Cognitive Systems Engineering
Upcoming locations include:
Singapore
Canberra, Australia
Stellenbosch, South Africa
Las Vegas, USA
View 2011 Introduction to Cognitive Systems Engineering Seminar Schedule
Introduction to Requirements Analysis 1-Day Seminar
Upcoming locations include:
Brisbane, Australia
Adelaide, Australia
Melbourne, Australia
View 2011 Introduction to Requirements Analysis Seminar Schedule
Preparing Great Requirements Specifications 1-Day Seminar
Upcoming locations include:
Melbourne, Australia
Adelaide, Australia
Canberra, Australia
View 2011 Preparing Great Requirements Specifications Seminar Schedule
PPI Upcoming Participation in Professional Conferences
SETE 2011 (Exhibiting)
SSTC 2011 (Exhibiting)
INCOSE IS 11 (Exhibiting)
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Defence & Industry 2011 (Exhibiting)
Kind regards from the SyEN team:
Robert Halligan, Managing Editor, email: rhalligan@ppi-int.com
Alwyn Smit, Editor, email: asmit@ppi-int.com
Elise Matthews, Production, email: ematthews@ppi-int.com
Project Performance International
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