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In the early 1990s, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center started
researching and developing autonomous and autonomic ground and
spacecraft control systems for future NASA missions. This research
started by experimenting with and developing expert systems to
automate ground station software and reduce the number of people
needed to control a spacecraft. This was followed by research into
agent-based technology to develop autonomous ground c- trol and
spacecraft. Research into this area has now evolved into using the
concepts of autonomic systems to make future space missions
self-managing and giving them a high degree of survivability in the
harsh environments in which they operate. This book describes much
of the results of this research. In addition, it
aimstodiscusstheneededsoftwaretomakefutureNASAspacemissionsmore
completelyautonomousandautonomic.Thecoreofthesoftwareforthesenew
missions has been written for other applications or is being
applied gradually in current missions, or is in current
development. It is intended that this book should document how NASA
missions are becoming more autonomous and autonomic and should
point to the way of making future missions highly - tonomous and
autonomic. What is not covered is the supporting hardware of these
missions or the intricate software that implements orbit and at-
tude determination, on-board resource allocation, or planning and
scheduling (though we refer to these technologies and give
references for the interested reader).
In the early 1990s, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center started
researching and developing autonomous and autonomic ground and
spacecraft control systems for future NASA missions. This research
started by experimenting with and developing expert systems to
automate ground station software and reduce the number of people
needed to control a spacecraft. This was followed by research into
agent-based technology to develop autonomous ground c- trol and
spacecraft. Research into this area has now evolved into using the
concepts of autonomic systems to make future space missions
self-managing and giving them a high degree of survivability in the
harsh environments in which they operate. This book describes much
of the results of this research. In addition, it
aimstodiscusstheneededsoftwaretomakefutureNASAspacemissionsmore
completelyautonomousandautonomic.Thecoreofthesoftwareforthesenew
missions has been written for other applications or is being
applied gradually in current missions, or is in current
development. It is intended that this book should document how NASA
missions are becoming more autonomous and autonomic and should
point to the way of making future missions highly - tonomous and
autonomic. What is not covered is the supporting hardware of these
missions or the intricate software that implements orbit and at-
tude determination, on-board resource allocation, or planning and
scheduling (though we refer to these technologies and give
references for the interested reader).
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