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Anomaly Detection for Next-Generation Space Launch Ground Operations
Author(s) -
Lilly Spirkovska,
David Iverson,
David Hall,
William M. Taylor,
Ann PattersonHine,
Barbara Brown,
Bob Ferrell,
Robert Waterman
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
2018 spaceops conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2010-2182
Subject(s) - anomaly detection , computer science , aerospace engineering , space (punctuation) , anomaly (physics) , remote sensing , geology , engineering , physics , artificial intelligence , operating system , condensed matter physics
NASA is developing new capabilities that will enable future human exploration missions while reducing mission risk and cost. The Fault Detection, Isolation, and Recovery (FDIR) project aims to demonstrate the utility of integrated vehicle health management (IVHM) tools in the domain of ground support equipment (GSE) to be used for the next generation launch vehicles. In addition to demonstrating the utility of IVHM tools for GSE, FDIR aims to mature promising tools for use on future missions and document the level of effort - and hence cost - required to implement an application with each selected tool. One of the FDIR capabilities is anomaly detection, i.e., detecting off-nominal behavior. The tool we selected for this task uses a data-driven approach. Unlike rule-based and model-based systems that require manual extraction of system knowledge, data-driven systems take a radically different approach to reasoning. At the basic level, they start with data that represent nominal functioning of the system and automatically learn expected system behavior. The behavior is encoded in a knowledge base that represents "in-family" system operations. During real-time system monitoring or during post-flight analysis, incoming data is compared to that nominal system operating behavior knowledge base; a distance representing deviation from nominal is computed, providing a measure of how far "out of family" current behavior is. We describe the selected tool for FDIR anomaly detection - Inductive Monitoring System (IMS), how it fits into the FDIR architecture, the operations concept for the GSE anomaly monitoring, and some preliminary results of applying IMS to a Space Shuttle GSE anomaly.

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