Orbital Signature Analyzer (OSA): A spacecraft health/safety monitoring and analysis tool
Abstract
Fixed or static limit sensing is employed in control centers to ensure that spacecraft parameters remain within a nominal range. However, many critical parameters, such as power system telemetry, are time-varying and, as such, their 'nominal' range is necessarily time-varying as well. Predicted data, manual limits checking, and widened limit-checking ranges are often employed in an attempt to monitor these parameters without generating excessive limits violations. Generating predicted data and manual limits checking are both resource intensive, while broadening limit ranges for time-varying parameters is clearly inadequate to detect all but catastrophic problems. OSA provides a low-cost solution by using analytically selected data as a reference upon which to base its limits. These limits are always defined relative to the time-varying reference data, rather than as fixed upper and lower limits. In effect, OSA provides individual limits tailored to each value throughout all the data. A side benefit of using relative limits is that they automatically adjust to new reference data. In addition, OSA provides a wealth of analytical by-products in its execution.
- Publication:
-
SpaceOps 1992: Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on Ground Data Systems for Space Mission Operations
- Pub Date:
- March 1993
- Bibcode:
- 1993gdss.proc..757W
- Keywords:
-
- Detection;
- Integrated Mission Control Center;
- Spacecraft Performance;
- Telemetry;
- Cost Reduction;
- Ground Based Control;
- Project Planning;
- Spacecraft Tracking;
- Space Communications, Spacecraft Communications, Command and Tracking