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Space Science and Technology Partnership Forum: Analysis for a Joint Demonstration of High Priority, In-Space Assembly Technology
Author(s) -
Doris Hamill,
Sharon Jefferies,
Robert W. Moses,
Frederic H. Stillwagen,
Carie Mullins,
Elaine Gresham
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
2018 aiaa space and astronautics forum and exposition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.103
H-Index - 1
DOI - 10.2514/6.2018-5307
Subject(s) - general partnership , space (punctuation) , space technology , joint (building) , computer science , aerospace engineering , engineering , architectural engineering , business , operating system , finance
The various U. S. government agencies that are pursuing in-space assembly technology have a common need to demonstrate technological capabilities on a space-based platform. Several of the agencies, and different mission developers within an agency, have independently begun planning such demonstrations. This paper reports on a study of how well the different planned platforms could support demonstrations of the agencies’ joint needs. The study first prioritized a comprehensive list of the needs for in-space assembly capabilities across the agencies against jointly agreed evaluation criteria. Each planned demonstration platform was characterized to a first order. The capability needs were qualitatively assessed against four figures of merit including their joint priority, and the platforms were assessed against five criteria to produce a quantitative weighting factor of reach capability need and each platform. A Quality Function Deployment (QFD) matrix was used to deploy the weighted capability needs against the weighted platforms capabilities. This first-order assessment showed that the platforms reflect a great deal of redundant capability without a strong reason to prefer one over the others. These results were largely insensitive to the details of the assumptions.

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