An economic analysis of a commercial approach to the design and fabrication of a space power system
Author(s) -
Z. C. Putney,
Joshua Been
Publication year - 1979
Publication title -
nasa sti repository (national aeronautics and space administration)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1979-914
Subject(s) - space (punctuation) , power (physics) , economic analysis , fabrication , computer science , systems engineering , engineering , economics , physics , operating system , quantum mechanics , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , agricultural economics
This paper discusses a commercial approach to the design and fabrication of an economical space power system. With the advent of the space shuttle, steps can be taken to back away from the presently used space qualified approach in order to reduce cost of space hardware by incorporating, where possible, commercial design, fabrication, and quality assurance methods. Cost reductions are projected through the conceptual design of a 2 kW space power system built with the capability for having serviceability. The approach to system costing that has been used takes into account both the constraints of operation in space and commercial production engineering approaches. The cost of this power system reflects a variety of cost/benefit tradeoffs that would reduce system cost as a function of system reliability requirements, complexity, and the impact of rigid specifications. A breakdown of the system design, documentation, fabrication and reliability and quality assurance cost estimates are detailed.
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