タイトル | How Systems Engineering and Risk Management Defend Against Murphy's Law and Human Error |
本文(外部サイト) | http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20040079821 |
著者(英) | Bay, Michael; Connley, Warren |
著者所属(英) | NASA Goddard Space Flight Center |
発行日 | 2004-01-01 |
言語 | eng |
内容記述 | Systems Engineering and Risk Management processes can work synergistically to defend against the causes of many mission ending failures. Defending against mission ending failures is facilitated by fostering a team that has a healthy respect for Murphy's Law and a team with a of curiosity for how things work, how they can fail, and what they need to know. This curiosity is channeled into making the unknowns known or what is uncertain more certain. Efforts to assure mission success require the expenditure of energy in the following areas: 1. Understanding what defines Mission Success as guided by the customer's needs, objectives and constraints. 2. Understanding how the system is supposed to work and how the system is to be produced, fueled by the curiosity of how the system should work and how it should be produced. 3. Understanding how the system can fail and how the system might not be produced on time and within cost, fueled by the curiosity of how the system might fail and how production might be difficult. 4. Understanding what we need to know and what we need learn for proper completion of the above three items, fueled by the curiosity of what we might not know in order to make the best decisions. |
NASA分類 | Man/System Technology and Life Support |
権利 | No Copyright |
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