Developing Experimental Models for NASA Missions with ASSL

Emil Vassev
(Lero, IE)
Mike Hinchey
(Lero, IE)

NASA's new age of space exploration augurs great promise for deep space exploration missions whereby spacecraft should be independent, autonomous, and smart. Nowadays NASA increasingly relies on the concepts of autonomic computing, exploiting these to increase the survivability of remote missions, particularly when human tending is not feasible. Autonomic computing has been recognized as a promising approach for the development of self-managing spacecraft systems that employ onboard intelligence and rely less on control links. The Autonomic System Specification Language (ASSL) is a framework for formally specifying and generating autonomic systems. As part of long-term research targeted at the development of models for space exploration missions that rely on principles of autonomic computing, we have employed ASSL to develop formal models and generate functional prototypes for NASA missions. This helps to validate features and perform experiments through simulation. Here, we discuss our work on developing such missions with ASSL.

In Manuela Bujorianu and Michael Fisher: Proceedings FM-09 Workshop on Formal Methods for Aerospace (FMA 2009), Eindhoven, The Netherlands, 3rd November 2009, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 20, pp. 88–94.
Published: 28th March 2010.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.20.10 bibtex PDF

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