6 - IAASS 2016 Conference - Safety First, Safety for All

Transcription

6 - IAASS 2016 Conference - Safety First, Safety for All
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Denius Student Center
John and Martha Hartley
Room (2nd floor)
Gleason Performing
Arts Center
Academic Quad 402
Room 110, 113
Skurla Hall
Crawford Building
Room 403 (4th floor)
Room 110 (Auditorium, 1st floor)
2
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
18-20 May 2016
Melbourne, Florida (USA)
Programme
Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, USA
3
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
About The Conference
INTRODUCTION
The International Association for the Advancement of Space Safety (http://iaass.space-safety.org) is a non-profit organisation
dedicated to furthering international cooperation and scientific advancement in the fields of space systems safety and
sustainability. IAASS is a member of the International Astronautical Federation (IAF), and Permanent Observer at the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS). The association exists to help shape and advance
an international culture of space safety (technical, organisational and socio-political) which could contribute to make
space missions, vehicles, stations, extra-terrestrial habitats, equipment and payload safer for the general public, ground
personnel, crews and flight participants. The association also pursues the safeguarding of the on-orbit, atmospheric, and
ground environment during space systems and associated ground infrastructure operations.
The eight IAASS Conference “Safety First, Safety for All” is an invitation to reflect and exchange information on a number
of topics in space safety and sustainability of national and international interest. The conference is also a forum to promote
mutual understanding, trust, and the widest possible international cooperation in such matters. The once exclusive “club”
of nations with autonomous space access capabilities is becoming crowded with fresh, and ambitious new entrants. New
commercial spaceports are starting operations and others are being built.
In the manned spaceflight arena a commercial market is becoming reality with government use of commercial services
for cargo and crew transportation to orbit, and the addition of a commercial habitable volume to the international space
station. Besides the national ambitions in space, the international cooperation both civil and commercial is also gaining
momentum.
Space bound systems and aviation traffic will share more and more a crowded airspace, while aviation will increasingly
rely on space-based safety-critical services. Air launches may become an important segment of the launch business and
could drive the establishment of ad-hoc regulations. Finally, most nations own nowadays space assets, mainly satellites
of various kinds and purpose, which are under the constant threat of collision with other spacecraft and with the ever
increasing number of space debris. Awareness is increasing internationally (as solemnly declared since decades in space
treaties) that space is a mankind asset and that we all have the duty of caring for it. Without proactive and courageous
international initiatives to establish an international regulatory framework for space traffic management we risk to negate
access and use of space to future generations.
The 8th IAASS Conference will in addition to normal sessions dedicate a set of panel sessions to four topics which need
to get better attention in space programs: Space Debris and Space Traffic Management, Safety Standards for Commercial
Human Spaceflight, Space Safety Education, and Mishap Investigation. IAASS Conferences
T. Sgobba
[email protected]
C. Felix
[email protected]
IAASS Administration
G. Elfering
[email protected]
International Association for the Advancement of Space Safety
Kapteynstraat 1
2201BB Noordwijk
The Netherlands
Phone: +31(0)712020023
Mob. : +31(0)643552918
Conference website:
http://iaassconference2016.space-safety.org/
4
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Conference Sponsors and Organizers
5
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Conference Programme Committee
Chairs:
I. Rongier (F)
R. DeLoach (USA)
N. Takeuchi (JP)
Members: W. Ailor (USA)
K. Amsden (USA)
C. Botts (USA)
G. Boy (USA)
E. Browne (USA)
C. Cazaux (F)
D. Cone (USA)
P. Contoveros (USA)
T. Erikson (USA)
H. Ernst (D)
C. Felix (NL)
D. Finkleman (USA)
W. Frazier (USA)
T. Fukatsu (JP)
G. Gafka (USA)
T. Heimann (USA)
R. Jakhu (CA)
Organizing Committee:
G. Elfering (NL)
T. Pfitzer (USA)
P. Kirkpatrick (USA)
J. Rudolph (USA)
M. Ciancone (USA)
J. Jeevarajan (USA)
M. Jones (USA)
B. Kanki (USA)
S. Kaul (IN)
R. Kelley (USA)
M. Kezirian (USA)
P. Kirkpatrick (USA)
J. Kreimer (D)
B. Lazare (F)
C. Leveau (F)
T. Lips (D)
E. Mango (USA)
W. McArthur (USA)
D. McKnight (USA)
A. Menzel (D)
C. Moura (BR)
M. Nogami (JP)
6
M. Glissman (USA)
P. Omaly (F)
N. Packham (USA)
S. Pearson (USA)
J. Pelton (USA)
T. Pfitzer (USA)
A. Quinn (UK)
L. Ren (CH)
K. Schubert (USA)
T. Sgobba (NL)
G. Sinnema (NL)
J. Souders (USA)
A. Stampfel (USA)
S. Takada (JP)
G. Trinchero (F)
S. Weikert (D)
P. Wilde (USA)
U. Wirth (D)
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Keynote Speakers
Charles F. Bolden
NASA Administrator
George C. Nield
Federal Aviation Administration
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space
Transportation
Jules Schneider
Lockheed Martin
Orion Program AIP Manager
Roberto Battiston
Italian Space Agency President
Kiyoshi Higuchi
Maj. Gen. Andrew M. Mueller
US Air Force Chief of Safety Comander
Jan Droz
International Astronautical
Federation President
(Jaxa VP retired)
Deputy Director of Safety,
Security and Environment,
CNES
Guy A. Boy
Christophe Chicher
Florida Institute of Technology
SHCDA Dean
7
Airbus DS
Head of System Design and Performance
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
CONFERENCE SESSIONS
Wednesday, May 18
Plenary Session Part I (08:30am - 10:30am)
Welcome Message:
T. Dwayne McCay
Vice President & Chief Operating Officer
President-Elect Florida Institute of Technology
Conference Introduction:
Isabelle Rongier
President
IAASS
Keynote Speakers:
Roberto Battiston
President
Italian Space Agency
Kiyoshi Higuchi
President
International Astronautics Federation
VP ret. Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
Jan Droz
Deputy Director of Safety, Security and Environment
French Space Agency (CNES)
Guy A. Boy
Dean School of Human Centered Design, Innovation and Arts
Florida Institute of Technology
S01: Session 01: Launch Safety Risk (11:00am - 12:30pm)
Source Data Applicability Impacts on Epistemic Uncertainty for Launch Vehicle Fault Tree Models
Mohammad Izeddin Al Hassan
NASA/Bastion Technologies Incorporated, United States of America; [email protected]
Lessons Learned from accepting the satellites developed by the organizations externally to JAXA for H-IIA launches
Manami Nogami
JAXA, Japan; [email protected]
Pitfalls and Precautions when using Predicted Failure Data for Quantitative Analysis of Safety Risk for Human Rated
Launch Vehicles
Glen Spencer Hatfield1, Frank Hark1, James Stott2
1
NASA/Bastion Technology inc., United States of America; 2NASA Safety and Mission Assurance; [email protected]
Characterizing Epistemic Uncertainty for Launch Vehicle Designs
Steven David Novack1, Jim Rogers2, Frank Hark1, Mohammad Al Hassan1
1
NASA/Bastion Technologies Incorporated, United States of America; 2NASA; [email protected]
8
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
S02: Session 02: Lessons Learned (11:00am - 12:30pm)
Role of Ground Safety Reviews in ISS Payload Mission Success
Ravi Narayana Margasahayam, Theodore Meade
NASA, United States of America; [email protected]
Icarus Laugh. Risk and space conquest
Jacques Arnould
Centre national d’études spatiales, France; [email protected]
The Demise of the Safety Engineer – Overcoming the Potential Impact on Space Safety
James Allen Runnells
JSC JETS Contract, HX5, LLC, United States of America; [email protected]
S03: Session 03: Commercial Spaceflight - I (11:00am - 12:30pm)
The Evolution of the NASA Commercial Crew Program Mission Assurance Process
Amy Christine Canfield
NASA / John F. Kennedy Space Center, United States of America; [email protected]
Safety Considerations regarding Commercial Human Spaceflight Training
Nicholas Mercury Carlstrom
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, United States of America; [email protected]
The Right Stuff ‘V’ The Right (Safe) Thing
Andy Quinn1, Ivan Sikora2
1
SATURN SMS Ltd, United Kingdom; 2City University, United Kingdom; [email protected]
S04: Panel Session: Impact of Newcomers
“CubeSat, ChipSat, Small Satellites and Huge Constellations”
(11:00am - 12:30pm)
S05: Session 05: Space Debris - I (2:00pm - 3:30pm)
A Systematic Study of Laser Ablation for Space Debris Mitigation
William Jerome Burger1, Roberto Battiston2, Andrea Cafagna2, Christian Manea3, Bruno Spataro4
1
FBK and TIFPA Trento Italy, Italy; 2University of Trento and TIFPA; 3TIFPA; 4National Laboratory of Frascati; [email protected]
RADID - Rapid Assessment of Design Impact on Debris Generation
Sven Weikert1, Bent Fritsche2, Valentino Zuccarelli1, Jochen Teufel1, Irene Huertas3, Sven Erb3
1
Astos Solutions GmbH, Germany; 2Hypersonic Technology Goettingen (HTG), Germany; 3European Space Agency, ESTEC, The Netherlands;
[email protected]
Improving Space Safety with Effective End-of-Life Solutions
Lorenzo Ferrario1, Stéphane Heinrich2, Alessio Fanfani1, Stefano Antonetti1, Luca Rossettini1
1
D-Orbit; 2Altran; [email protected]
Long term orbit propagation: lessons learnt and on going activities at CNES
Vincent Morand, Clemence Le Fevre, Hubert Fraysse
CNES, France; [email protected]
9
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
S06: Session 06: Regulations & Standards – I (2:00pm - 3:30pm)
2016 U.S. Safety Regulation Status Update
Diane Howard
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, United States of America; [email protected]
Regulation of Safety of Space Mining
Ram S. Jakhu, Joseph N. Pelton
McGill University, Canada; [email protected]
Commercial Human Spaceflight: What Regulation?
Tommaso Sgobba1, Michael Kezirian2
1
International Association for the Advancement of Space Safety, Netherlands, The; 2International Space Safety Foundation, USA; tommaso.
[email protected]
Filling The Regulatory Void For Launch And Reentry Safety Resulting From The Commercialization Of Space Operations
Ruth Stilwell
Aerospace Policy Solutions, LLC, United States of America; [email protected]
S07: Session 07: Launch Ground Operations Safety (2:00pm - 3:30pm)
Dealing with a subtle danger during launch preparation operations: oxygen-deficient atmosphere leading to anoxia
Miguel Morère
CNES, France; [email protected]
Ground Operations Human Factors Task Analysis Pathfinder
Timothy Barth1, Charlie Dischinger1, Cynthia Null1, Damon Stambolian2, Don Tran2, Marcia Groh-Hammond2, Gena Henderson2, Darcy
Miller3, Tracy Neal3, Richard Parker3, Barbara Kanki4, Rich Ellenberger5, Jennifer Boyer5, David Reynolds6, Matt Czech7, Jeannie Ruiz7
1
NASA Engineering and Safety Center; 2KSC Engineering; 3KSC Safety and Mission Assurance; 4Ames Human Factors; 5JSC Human
Engineering; 6MSFC Human Factors; 7KSC Ground Systems Development and Operations; [email protected]
The Payload Safety Handbook: a self-supporting tool to ensure the respect of regulations applicable to spacecraft at
the Guiana Space Center
Loriane Bourjac
CNES, France; [email protected]
Ensuring Payload Safety on Missions Involving Special Partnerships
Calvert A. Staubus, Rachel C. Willenbring
NASA, United States of America; [email protected]
S08: Session 08: Designing Safety – I (2:00pm - 3:30pm)
Flat H Redundant Frangible Joint - Evolution
Thomas Edward Diegelman, Christopher W Brown, Brian V. Rochon, Todd Hinkel, Andrew L Benjamin
NASA / JSC, United States of America; [email protected]
Pressure Suits for Suborbital Spaceflight - mandatory or not?
Christian Lüthen1, Neil Jaschinski2
1
Erasmus MC - University Hospital Rotterdam, Netherlands, The; 2Applied Rocket Technology; [email protected]
Overview of Non-Ionizing Radiation Safety Operations on the International Space Station
John Flores-McLaughlin1, Sam Ghalayini2, James Runnells3, Ramona Gaza4
1
University of Houston / NASA Space Radiation Analysis Group, United States of America; 2Lockheed Martin IS&GS; 3Jacobs Technology;
4
Lockheed Martin IS&GS / NASA Space Radiation Analysis Group, United States of America; [email protected]
10
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
S09: Session 09: Safety Critical Software (4:00pm - 6:00pm)
STPA for space software dependability and safety
Carlos Henrique Netto Lahoz1,3, Synara Rosa Gomes de Medeiros2
1
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, United States of America; 2Embraer, Brazil; 3Instituto de Aeronautica e Espaco IAE, Brazil; lahoz@
mit.edu
A FDIR implentation based on functional and software units design
Olivier Boudillet, Jacques Magne
AIRBUS DEFENCE & SPACE, France; [email protected]
Safety Characteristics In Systems Application Software For Human Rated Exploration Missions
Edward Joseph Mango
NASA / US Govt, United States of America; [email protected]
S10: Session 10: Launch Safety – I (4:00pm - 6:00pm)
Launch and Reentry Safety Objectives
Jerold Mark Haber
ACTA, Inc, United States of America; [email protected]
Improved Range Safety Methodologies for Long-Duration Heavy-lift Balloon Missions Over Populated Regions
George M Lloyd1, Kevin Benn1, Jerry Haber1, Danielle Franklin2
1
ACTA Inc., United States of America; 2Pacific Missile Range Facility; [email protected]
Near range safety analysis for a reusable launcher concept based on Toss-Back
Alexandra Martinez Torio, Vanessa Guenard, Jean-Marc Bahu, David Delorme
CNES, France; [email protected]
Common Cause Failure Modeling in Space Launch Vehicles
Frank Hark1,2, Paul Britton2,3, Rob Ring1,2, Steven Novack1,2, James Stott2,3
1
Bastion Technologies Incorporated, United States of America; 2Marshall Space Flight Center Safety and Mission Assurance; 3NASA; frank.
[email protected]
S11: Session 11: Operations Safety (4:00pm - 6:00pm)
You Can’t Reach for the Stars if You are Tripping Over the Ground! (Preventing Slips, Trips, and Falls)
Darcy H. Miller1, Mark S. Raysich2, Mary K. Kirkland3
1
NASA-KSC, United States of America; 2APT; 3Integrated Mission Support Service; [email protected]
Recurring Themes from Human Spaceflight Mishaps During Flight Tests and Early Operations
Timothy Barth1, Steve Lilley2, Donna Blankmann-Alexander3, Barbara Kanki4, Blake Parker5
1
NASA Engineering and Safety Center; 2NASA Safety Center; 3Abacus Technology Corporation; 4Ames Research Center; 5ASRC Aerospace;
[email protected]
The safety approval of procedures used on board ISS
Alessandro Nocera1, Piera Mannini2
1
Aviospace s.r.l.; 2Thales Alenia Space S.p.A.; [email protected]
Probabilistic Survivability Versus Time Moeling
James Jeffrey Joyner. Sr
NASA, United States of America; [email protected]
11
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
S12: Session 12: Probabilistic Risk Assessment (4:00pm - 6:00pm)
Space Mission PRAs
Diana L. DeMott
SAIC, United States of America; [email protected]
Resilience Engineering for space missions safety assessment
Riccardo Patriarca, Francesco Costantino, Giulio Di Gravio
Sapienza University of Rome, Italy; [email protected]
Quantifying the Benefit of a Developmental Test Program: Probablistic Risk Assessment and Red Bull Stratos
Akshay Kothakonda1, Jonathan Clark2, Art Thompson3, Michael Tevriz Kezirian1
1
University of Southern California, United States of America; 2National Space Biomedical Research Institute, United States of America; 3Sage
Cheshire Aerospace Tooling, United States of America; [email protected]
International collaboration for HTV PRA analysis
Masami Miki1, Satomi Takada1, Takashi Goto1, Koji Oga1, Toru Yoshihara2, Hiraku Kudo2, Norimitsu Kamimori2, Jinfeng Ni3, John
Yasensky3, Philip Mortillaro4
1
JAMSS, Japan; 2JAXA, Japan; 3MAPI Contract, USA; 4NASA, USA; [email protected]
Dynamic fault tree analysis using Monte Carlo simulation in probabilistic safety assessment
Jinjing Wang, Liming Ren, Hang Wu
China Academy of Aerospace Standardization and Product Assurance, China, People’s Republic of; [email protected]
Thursday, May 19
Plenary Session Part II (08:30am - 10:00am)
Keynote Speakers:
Charles Bolden
Administrator
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Andrew M. Mueller
Chief of Safety
United States Air Force
George Nield
Associated Administrator
Federal Aviation Administration For Commercial Space Transportation
Jules Schneider
Orion Program AIP Manager
Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company
Christophe Chicher
Head of System Design and Performance
Airbus DS
12
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
S13: Session 13: Commercial Spaceflight – II (10:30pm - 12:00pm)
Single Stage To Orbit Spaceplane Safety
Andy Quinn1, Richard Varvill2
1
SATURN SMS Ltd, United Kingdom; 2Reaction Engines Ltd; [email protected]
Operational Safety Considerations for Rapid Turnaround Private Suborbital Flight Providers
Justin Otto Karl
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, United States of America; [email protected]
Development of a Commercially Available Pressure Suit for Suborbital Flight
Erik Seedhouse
Embry-Riddle University, United States of America; [email protected]
From Parabolic to Manned Sub-orbital Flights: S3 Safety and Certification Approach
Jean-Bruno Marciacq, Thomas Avanzi, Davide Apostolo, Ntorina Antoni
Swiss Space Systems (S3), Switzerland; [email protected]
S14: Session 14: Launch Safety – II (10:30am - 12:00pm)
Potential Uses of Consequence Analyses for Range Safety
Paul David Wilde
Federal Aviation Administration, United States of America; [email protected]
Managing a Safe and Successful Multi-User Spaceport
Taylor M Dacko, Kirk A Ketterer, Phillip T Meade
NASA Kennedy Space Center, United States of America; [email protected]
Launch System Hazard Analysis : Methodology And Lessons Learnt After 5 Years Of Application
David Delorme, Arnaud Biard
CNES, France; [email protected]
The use of an atmospheric model for studying the gas dispersion at the Brazilian space launch center
Gilberto Fisch2, Paulo Geovani Iriart3, Vinicius Couto Milanez2, Carlos Augusto Teixeira de Moura1
1
Alcantara Cyclone Space - ACS, Brazil; 2Aeronautics and Space Institute - IAE, Brazil; 3Technical Institute of Aeronautics - ITA, Brazil;
[email protected]
S15: Session 15: Organization Culture – I (10:30am - 12:00pm)
Purpose, Principles, and Challenges of the NASA Engineering and Safety Center
Michael Gilbert
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, United States of America; [email protected]
Observations, Reflections, and Lessons Learned... from ~500 SSPCBs & ~1000 IMMTs... and gobs of SORRs, FRRs, etc.
George K Gafka
NASA, United States of America; [email protected]
Space Safety Culture and Policy
Lt Col Steve Bogstie
AFSEC/SES, United States of America; [email protected]
Launch Systems Conformity Training Process and academic methodology
Caroline Gabrielle Josephine Aussilhou, David Gerard Miot
CNES, France; [email protected]
13
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
S16: Session 16: Regulations & Standards – II (10:30am - 12:00pm)
Need for Space Regulation in India
Sanat Kaul
International Foundation for Aviation, Aerospace & Development (India Chapter), India; [email protected]
Policy Challenges Related to Nanosatellites
Matteo Emanuelli1, Blake James Edwards1, Matt Driedger1, Justin Atchison1, Jordan Sotudeh1, Gabriel Lapilli1, Maria Grulich1, Laura
Bettiol1, Caroline Thro1, Eren Gorur1, Leehandi De Witt1, Alon Davidi1, Suman Gautam1, Sirisha Bandla1, Juan Gramajo1, Milan Mijovic1,
Laura León Perez1, Chantelle Dubois1, Emmanuelle David1, Meidad Pariente2, Chris Johnson3
1
Space Generation Advisory Council, Austria; 2Spacecialist, Israel; 3Secure World Foundation, USA; [email protected]
Near space and modern aerospace principles
Taro-Jesus Kuusiholma
Sharper Shape Inc., Finland; [email protected]
Proposal For A Governing Space Safety Treaty Organization
Leslie Ann Alford
A-P-T Research, Inc., United States of America; [email protected]
Legal Challenges to the Safety of Commercial Space Activities Provided by Aerospace Launch Systems
Ntorina Antoni
Swiss Space Systems Holding SA, Switzerland; [email protected]
S17: Session 17: Re-entry Safety – I (1:30pm - 3:00pm)
Upgraded version of the DEBRISK object-oriented tool
Julien Annaloro, Guillaume Prigent, Stéphane Galera, Pierre Omaly
CNES, France; [email protected]
Rationale and methodologies of ADMIRE - Aviation (Space) Debris and Meteorites Integrated Risk Evaluation
Matteo Emanuelli1, Tommaso Sgobba1, Hauke Ernst2, Sven Weikart3, Tobias Lips4, Jonas Radtke7, James Beck11, Jim Merrifield12,
Carmen Pardini5, Luciano Anselmo5, Jeremie Vaubaillon13, Daniel Hestroffer13, Carl-Herbert Rokitansky6, Bruno Lazare1, Thomas Hauf8,
Juergen Lang10, Sven Kaltenhaeuser9, Jens Hampe9
1
International Association for Advancement of Space Safety; 2Airbus Defence and Space; 3ASTOS; 4HTG; 5ISTI-CNR; 6Universität Salzburg;
7
TU Braunschweig; 8Leibniz Universität Hannover; 9Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt; 10Meteosolutions; 11Belstead Research; 12Fluid
Gravity Engineering; 13IMCCE; [email protected]
In-Orbit Demonstration of Satellite Re-entry Capabilities: the D-SAT Mission
Alessio Fanfani1, Alexander Weigand2, Elena Toson1, Simone Brilli1, Matteo Trotti1, Angelo Dainotto1, Lorenzo Ferrario1
1
D-Orbit, Italy; 2Bayern-Chemie, Germany; [email protected]
S18: Session 18: Space Traffic Control – I (1:30pm - 3:00pm)
Preliminary Study On Inadvertent Laser Illumination Hazards Posed To Satellite Optical Sensors
Patrick Shriver1, Karen Yamamoto1, Chad Cogburn1, Chris Jones1, Ken Miller2
1
Metatech Corporation, United States of America; 2Satellite Assessment Center, Air Force Research Laboratory, United States of America;
[email protected]
The Impact of New Trends in Satellite Launches on Orbital Debris Environment
Arif Göktug Karacalıoglu, Jan Stupl
NASA Ames Research Center, United States of America; [email protected]
Orbital Debris: What are the best near-term actions to take? A view from the field
Mark Andrew Skinner
The Boeing Company, United States of America; [email protected]
14
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Analysis On Spacecraft Safety Enhancement Through On-Orbit Servicing
Aureliano Rivolta, Jeremy Wang, Caroline Thro, Nicolò Carletti, Ali Nasseri, Joao Lousada, Matteo Emanuelli
Space Generation Advisory Council; [email protected]
S19: Session 19: Designing Safety – II (1:30pm - 3:00pm)
Predicting Damaged Pressure Vessel Failure After Orbital Debris Strike
Michael Scott Surratt, Michael Kezirian
University of Southern California, United States of America; [email protected]
Early Engagement of Safety & Mission Assurance Expertise Using Systems Engineering Tools: A Risk-Based Approach
to Early Identification of Safety and Assurance Requirements
Scott Darpel, Sean Beckman
NASA John H Glenn Research Center, United States of America; [email protected]
Safe Use of Electrical COTS hardware in Human Space Flight
James Allen Runnells
JSC JETS Contract, HX5, LLC, United States of America; [email protected]
Introducing IAASS–ISSB-S–1700 Rev. B Space Safety Standard Commercial Human Rated System
Tommaso Sgobba
International Association for the Advacement of Space Safety, Netherlands; [email protected]
S20: Session 20: Human Performance – I (1:30pm - 3:00pm)
Human Factor in flight safety
Herve Poussin, Thierry Vallee, Regis Bertrand
CNES, France; [email protected]
Managing Cognitive Bias in Safety Decision Making: Application of Emotional Intelligence Competencies
Walter Scott Hersing
Kennedy Space Center, United States of America; [email protected]
IAASS Book Project: “Space Safety and Human Performance”
Barbara Kanki, Tommaso Sgobba
International Association for the Advancement of Space Safety; The Netherlands; [email protected]
S21: Panel Session:
Role of Standards in Commercial Human Spaceflight Safety Governance
(1:30pm - 3:00pm)
S22: Session22: Space Debris – II (3:30pm - 5:30pm)
Good practice for upper stages going to Lagrangian point - Application to the Ariane 5 JWST mission
David-Alexis Handschuh1, Jean Campedelli2, Norbert Lidon3
1
CNES Launcher Directorate, France; 2ALTEN, France; 3ESA Launcher Directorate; [email protected]
Satellite Design for Demise: Updated state of the art and innovative concepts
Stephane Heinrich1, Lilith Grassi2, Roberto Destefanis2
1
ALTRAN, France; 2THALES, Italy; [email protected]
15
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Debris Remediation Examined via an Operational Success Framework
Darren Scott McKnight
Integrity Applications, Inc., United States of America; [email protected]
Fast and Flexible Space Debris Risk Assessment for Satellites
Max Gulde, Scott Kempf, Frank Schäfer
Fraunhofer Institute for High-Speed Dynamics, Ernst-Mach-Institut, Germany; [email protected]
S23: Panel Session: SpaceShipTwo Lessons Learned
(3:30pm - 5:30pm)
S24: Session 24: Materials (3:30pm – 5:30pm)
Investigation of Ti-6Al-4V alloy response to atmospheric re-entry exposure
Jessica Lynn Buckner, Stephen W Stafford, Darren M Cone, John D Olivas
University of Texas at El Paso, United States of America; [email protected]
The Spacecraft Fire Experiment (Saffire) – Objectives and Status
William Robert Schoren, Gary Ruff, David Urban
NASA/Glenn Research Center, United States of America; [email protected]
About the Demisability of Propellant Tanks during Atmospheric Re-entry from LEO
Tobias Lips1, Ronny Kanzler1, Thorn Schleutker2, Ali Guelhan2, Benoit Bonvoisin3, Tiago Soares3, Gerben Sinnema3
1
HTG GmbH, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany; 2DLR, Cologne, Germany; 3ESA/ESTEC, Noordwijk, The Netherlands; [email protected]
Demise and Survivability Criteria for Spacecraft Design Optimisation
Mirko Trisolini, Hugh Lewis, Camilla Colombo
University of Southampton, United Kingdom; [email protected]
S25: Panel Session: Space Safety Education
(3:30pm - 5:30pm)
Friday, May 20
S26: Session 26: Space Traffic Control – II (8:30am - 10:30am)
Exploring Necessary Altitude Awareness and Response Times for Air Traffic Control during Space Launch and Reentry
Vehicle Operations
Zheng Tao1, Ganghuai Wang1, Paul D. Wilde2
1
The MITRE Organization, United States of America; 2Federal Aviation Administration; [email protected]
Optimal Impulsive Design for Aeroassisted Orbit Transfer in Noncoplanar Orbit Debris Remove
Ruidong Yan
National Space Science Center,Chinese Academy of Science, China, People’s Republic of; [email protected]
16
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Why a future commercial spacecraft must be able to SWIM
Frank Morlang1, Jorge Ferrand2
1
German Aerospace Center DLR, Germany; 2Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University ERAU, USA; [email protected]
Aerocene: Obtaining Regulatory Approval and Performing Risk Assessment for Stratospheric Science and Human
Spaceflight
Michael Tevriz Kezirian
University of Southern California, United States of America; [email protected]
Space Situational Awareness and Space Traffic Management Points of Intersection
George Vazquez
Aerospace, United States of America; [email protected]
Development of Space Debris Collision Warning Techniques in NSSC
Ronglan Wang, Siqing Liu
National Space Science Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China, People’s Republic of; [email protected]
S27: Session 27: Re-entry Safety – II (8:30am - 10:30am)
Update of aerodynamics and heat flux model for ORSAT-J
Keiichiro Fujimoto, Hiroumi Tani, Hideyo Negishi, Yasuhiro Saito, Nobuyuki Iizuka, Koichi Okita
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan; [email protected]
Atmospheric entry of space debris: oxidation and emissivity data for model implementation
Marianne Balat-Pichelin1, Julien Annaloro2, Pierre Omaly3
1
PROMES-CNRS laboratory, France; 2CNES, Toulouse, France; 3CNES, Toulouse, France; [email protected]
Statistical Issues for Calculating Reentry Hazards
Mark John Matney, John Bacon
Orbital Debris Program Office, Johnson Space Center, NASA, United States of America; [email protected]
The Uncontrolled Re-Entry Of Progress-M 27m
Carmen Pardini, Luciano Anselmo
ISTI-CNR, Italy; [email protected]
Comparison between two spacecraft-oriented tools: PAMPERO & SCARAB
Julien Annaloro1, Tobias Lips2, Stephane Galera1, Guillaume Prigent1, Pierre Omaly1
1
CNES, France; 2HTG - Hypersonic Technology Göttingen, Germany; [email protected]
S28: Session 28: Organization Culture – II (08:30am - 10:30am)
NASA’s Approach to Technical Excellence of Safety Professionals
John Marinaro, Harmony Myers
NASA, United States of America; [email protected]
NASA’s Safety Culture Path
Tracy G Dillinger
NASA, United States of America; [email protected]
The Evolution of Continuing Education & Training for Safety & Mission Assurance Professionals
Megan Stroud, Tom Pfitzer
A-P-T Research, Inc., United States of America; [email protected]
17
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
S29: Session 29: Designing Safety – III (8:30am - 10:30am)
How to ensure medical safety and rescue in human spaceflight for the future
Yacine Benyoucef
SPACEMEDEX, France; [email protected]
Unified maximum likelihood based method for composite stress rupture data analysis
Amy Engelbrecht-Wiggans
Cornell University, United States of America; [email protected]
Aerospace Pressure Vessel Standards: Update on AIAA S-080A and AIAA S-081B
Michael Tevriz Kezirian
University of Southern California, United States of America; [email protected]
S30: Panel Session:
Mishap Investigation
(08:30am - 10:30am)
S31: Session 31: NEO & Cosmic Hazards (11:00am - 12:30pm)
Asteroids discovery and astrometry reduction using CoLiTec software: research and development
Sergii Khlamov1, Oleksandr Briukhovetskyi2, Vadym Savanevych1,3, Eugene Dikov4, Artem Pohorelov1
1
Kharkiv National University of Radioelectronic, Kharkiv, Ukraine; 2Kharkiv representative of the general customer - State Space Agency of
Ukraine, Kharkiv, Ukraine; 3Uzhhorod National University, Uzhhorod, Ukraine; 4Research, Design and Technological Institute of Micrographics,
Kharkiv, Ukraine; [email protected]
Space Situational Awareness Programme: enhanced NEO Propagator (NEOProp2)
Valentino Zuccarelli1, Celia Yabar Valles2
1
Astos Solutions GmbH, Germany; 2ESA Estec, The Netherlands; [email protected]
Global Cosmic Risk Assessment Study (COSRAS) by the IAASS
Joseph Pelton
Chair IAASS Academic Committee, The Netherlands ; [email protected]
S32: Session 32: Human Performance – II (11:00am - 12:30pm)
Human Factors Checklist: Think Human Factors - Keep the Human in the Loop
Darcy H. Miller1, Katrine S. Stelges2, Timothy S. Barth3, Damon.B. Stambolian1, Gena M. Henderson1, Charles Dischinger3, Barbara.G.
Kanki4
1
NASA-KSC, United States of America; 2Jacobs Technology; 3NASA Engineering Safety Center; 4NASA-ARC, Retired; [email protected]
A Methodology for Trending International Space Station Human Factors Data
Bettina L Beard1, Cynthia H Null2, Gordon A Voss3, Susan Schuh4
1
NASA Ames Research Center, United States of America; 2NASA Langley Research Center, United States of America; 3NASA Johnson Space
Center, United States of America; 4MEI Technologies, United States of America; [email protected]
Organizational, technical and human resilience in complex operations
Stig O. Johnsen1, Knut Fossum2, Brit-Eli Danielsen2
1
Sintef, Trondheim, Norway; 2N-USOC CIRIS at NTNU, Trondheim, Norway; [email protected]
18
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
S33: Session 33: Safety on Long Duration Missions (11:00am - 12:30pm)
Study of Safety Assessment for Chinese Space Station Operation Mission
Wei Zhang, Fuqiu Li, Fengxi Chen, ShouSong Qing
China Astronautics Standards Institute, China, People’s Republic of; [email protected]
Identification of Hazards Associated with a One-way Human Mission to Mars
Joao Lousada, Aureliano Rivolta, Matteo Emanuelli, Ali Nasseri
Space Generation Advisory Council, Austria; [email protected]
Develop global Safety synergies for long-range human space exploration, with focus on Launch Systems (manned and
unmanned)
Aline Decadi
HE Space Operations BV on behalf of European Space Agency, France; [email protected]
S34: Lecture by N. Packham:
Role The Columbia Crew Survival Investigation Report – What happened to the
STS-107 Columbia crew and what can be learned from it
(11:00am - 12:30pm)
S35: Lecture by C. Lauer:
A Global Perspective On Suborbital Commercial Human Spaceflight Safety
(11:00am - 12:30pm)
Plenary Closing Session Pt.1 (02:00pm - 03:00pm)
Hypersonic, Space Transit, and Space Access Flight Test
James Vasil Souders1, Timothy R Jorris2
1
AFSEC/SES, United States of America; 2Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company; [email protected]
Plenary Closing Session Pt. 2 (03:00pm - 04:00pm)
SABRE & Skylon: The Next Generation in Space Access
Andy Quinn, Mark Thomas, Richard Varvill
Reaction Engines, United Kingdom
19
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Poster Session
Wednesaday, May 18 (12:00pm)
Orbital Debris Atmospheric Reentry
Stephane Heinrich1, Florent Leglise1, Luke Harrison1, Frederic Renard2
1
ALTRAN, France, Cannes; 2ALTRAN,France, Lyon; [email protected]
Escape Cabin
Robert N. Talmage
TAAS Company, United States of America; [email protected]
Orbit covariance prediction based on numerical orbit model
Ruidong Yan, Ronglan Wang, Siqing Liu
National Space Science Center,Chinese Academy of Science, China, People’s Republic of; [email protected]
The Accident Mechanism and Model for Aerospace Software System
Xiao Sun, xinlei Zhou, Jie Yang, Renfei Dong, Jie Jin
China Academy of Aerospace Standardization and Produce Assurance, China, People’s Republic of; [email protected]
A method based on IPOS model for software hazard probability risk analysis
Jie Yang, Xinlei Zhou, Jiahui Luan, Xiao Sun, Jie Jin
China Academy of Aerospace Standardization and Produce Assurance, China, People’s Republic of; [email protected]
20
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
Award Winners
Jerome Lederer Space Safety Pioneer Award
Winner: Dr. William Ailor, The Aerospace Corp, El-Segundo (US - CA)
Sponsor: Lockheed Martin
William
Ailor
Award assigned bi-annually to an individual who has made outstanding contributions in the field of space
safety. Named in honor of Jerome Lederer (1902-2004) who was an American aviation-safety pioneer, known
as “Mr. Aviation Safety”.
Vladimir Syromiatnikov Safety-by-Design Award
Winner: Prof. Nancy Leveson, MIT, Boston (US - MA)
Sponsor: International Space Safety Foundation
Nancy
Leveson
The Vladimir Syromyatnikov Safety-by-Design Award is a means for IAASS to honor outstanding designers
and engineers who have made major technical contribution toward systems safety. Named in honor of Vladimir Syromiatnikov (1934-2006) the Russian designer of one of the most successful piece of space hardware,
the docking system APAS. It was used in the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project in 1975, successful in more than 200
dockings of Soviet/Russian, on the Shuttle and on the International Space Station.
Joseph Loftus Space Sustainability Award
Winner: Dr. Nicholas Johnson, NASA-JSC (ret.), Houston (US - TX)
Sponsor: Airbus DS
Nicholas
Johnson
The Joseph Loftus Space Sustainability Award is assigned to an individual, or to a team, which has made
outstanding contributions in the field of space sustainability. The IAASS Space Sustainability Award is
named after Joseph (Joe) P. Loftus (1930-2005) who was the early proponent of orbital debris research,
gained an international reputation in that field and was known as the godfather of the NASA Orbital Debris
Program Office.
Da Vinci Life-long Achievements Award
Winner: Jean-Pierre Trinchero, CNES, Paris (F)
Sponsor: International Space Safety Foundation
Jean-Pierre
Trinchero
The Leonardo da Vinci Life-long achievements award recognizes and individual whole life-long work has
significantly contributed to the advancement of space safety and to the mission goals and core values of
IAASS. The IAASS Long-life Achievements Award is named after Leonardo da Vinci, the renaissance genius
of science, engineering and art.
Da Vinci Life-long Achievements Award
Winner: Ram Sarup Jakhu, McGill University, Montreal (CA)
Sponsor: International Space Safety Foundation
Ram Sarup
Jakhu
The Leonardo da Vinci Life-long achievements award recognizes and individual whole life-long work has
significantly contributed to the advancement of space safety and to the mission goals and core values of
IAASS. The IAASS Long-life Achievements Award is named after Leonardo da Vinci, the renaissance genius
of science, engineering and art.
21
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
IAASS Conference & Awards
Gala Dinner
The Conference Gala Dinner will take place on
Thursday 19 May at 7:30pm
at
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex
There will be NASA KSC buses to take participants from
Hilton-Melbourne at Rialto Place to the dinner,
departing at 6:30pm and arriving at Shuttle Atlantis Exhibit at 7:30pm
22
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
8th IAASS International Space Safety Conference
Melbourne, Florida – USA, 18-20 May 2016
Wednesday, May 18
8:30 - 10:30
P1: Plenary Session - Part I (GLEASON)
Chairs: M. Ciancone, N. Takeuchi
10:30 - 11:00
Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:30
Session 01:
Launch Safety Risk
Chairs:
C. Moura,
C. Botts
Session 02:
Lessons Learned
Chairs:
W. Frazier,
J. Pelton
Session 03:
Commercial
Spaceflight - I
Chairs:
A. Quinn,
T. Erikson
S04
Panel Session:
Impact of
Newcomers:
CubeSat, ChipSat,
Small Satellites
and Huge
Constellations
Chairs:
M. Glissman,
B. Lazare
SKURLA HALL Rm
110
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm113
GLEASON
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm110
12:30 - 14:00
Lunch Break
14:00 - 15:30
Session 05:
Space Debris - I
Chairs:
W. Ailor,
D. Mcknight
Session 06:
Regulations &
Standards - I
Chairs:
R. Jakhu,
D. Howard
Session 07:
Launch Ground
Operations Safety
Chairs:
T. Pfitzer,
R. DeLoach
Session 08:
Designing Safety - I
Chairs:
M. Nogami,
G. Gafka
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm110
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm113
GLEASON
SKURLA HALL Rm
110
15:30 - 16:00
Coffee Break
16:00 - 18:00
Session 09:
Safety Critical
Software
Chairs:
M. Ciancone,
I. Rongier
Session 10:
Launch Safety - I
Chairs:
C. Botts,
N. Takeuchi
Session 11:
Operations Safety
Chairs:
C. Cazaux,
D. McKnight
Session 12:
Probabilistic Risk
Assessment
Chairs:
G. Boy,
M. Kezirian
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm110
GLEASON
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm113
Crawford Bldg. - Rm
403
Thursday, May 19
8:30 – 10:00
P2: Plenary Session - Part II (GLEASON)
Chairs: R. DeLoach, M. Glissman
10:00 - 10:30
Coffee Break
10:30 - 12:00
Session 13:
Commercial
Spaceflight – II
Chairs:
P.Kirkpatrick,
A. Stampfel
Session 14:
Launch Safety – II
Chairs:
T. Pfitzer,
N. Takeuchi
Session 15:
Organization
Culture – I
Chairs:
B. Kanki,
S. Kaul
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm110
GLEASON
DENIUS STUDENT SKURLA HALL Rm
CENTER Hartley Rm 110
12:00 - 13:30
Lunch Break and IAASS General Assembly
23
Session 16:
Regulations &
Standards – II
Chairs:
A. Menzel,
M. Nogami
8th INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE
SAFETY FIRST, SAFETY FOR ALL
13:30 - 15:00
Session 17:
Re-entry Safety – I
Chairs:
T. Lips,
K.G. Amsden
Session 18:
Space Traffic
Control – I
Chairs:
F. Alby,
H. Ernst
Session 19:
Designing Safety
– II
Chairs:
E. Mango,
N. Packham
Session 20:
Human
Performance – I
Chairs:
B. Kanki,
K. Amsden
S21
Panel Session:
“Role of Standards
in Commercial
Human
Spaceflight Safety
Governance”
Chairs:
P. Wilde,
T. Sgobba
GLEASON
SKURLA HALL Rm
110
DENIUS STUDENT
CENTER Hartley
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm110
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm113
15:00 - 15:30
Coffee Break
15:30 - 17:30
Session 22:
Space
Debris – II
Chairs:
C. Cazaux,
W. Ailor
S23
Panel Session:
SpaceShipTwo
Lessons Learned
Chairs:
T. Erikson,
K. Wilson
Session 24:
Materials
Chairs:
M. Ciancone,
D. Cone
S25
Panel Session:
Space Safety
Education
Chairs:
J. Pelton,
M. Kezirian
DENIUS STUDENT
CENTER Hartley
SKURLA HALL Rm
110
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm110
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm113
18:30
Gala Dinner Buses departing from Hilton-Melbourne at Rialto Place
Friday, May 20
8:30 - 10:30
Session 26:
Space Traffic
Control – II
Chairs:
F. Alby,
M. Glissman
Session 27:
Re-entry Safety – II
Chairs:
P. Omaly,
T. Lips
Session 28:
Organization
Culture – II
Chairs:
B. Kanki,
I. Rongier
Session 29:
Designing Safety
– III
Chairs:
A. Quinn,
T. Heimann
S30
Panel Session:
Mishap
Investigation
Chairs:
I. Rongier,
M. Glissman
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm110
GLEASON QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm113
DENIUS STUDENT Crawford Bldg. - Rm
CENTER Hartley Rm 404
10:30 - 11:00
Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:30
Session 31:
NEO Hazards
Chairs:
W. Ailor,
J. Pelton
Session 32:
Human
Performance – II
Chairs:
W. McArthur,
T. Fukatsu
Session 33:
Safety on Long
Duration Missions
Chairs:
T. Sgobba,
J. Kreimer
S34:
Lecture
The Columbia
Crew Survival
Investigation
Report – What
happened to the
STS-107 Columbia
crew and what can
be learned from it.
Chairs:
M. Ciancone,
N. Takeuchi
S35:
Lecture
A Global
Perspective
On Suborbital
Commercial
Human Spaceflight
Safety
Chairs:
A. Quinn,
A. Menzel
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm110
DENIUS STUDENT
CENTER Hartley
GLEASON
SKURLA HALL Rm
110
QUAD Bldg. 402 Rm113
12:30 - 14:00
Lunch Break
14:00 - 15:00
Plenary Closing Session Part I: Hypersonic, Space Transit, and Space Access Flight Test
Chair: M. Glissman, M. Ciancone
15:00 - 16:00
Plenary Closing Session Part II: SABRE & Skylon: The Next Generation in Space Access
Chairs: N. Takeuchi, R. DeLoach
16:00 - 16:30
Conference Wrap-Up & Announcement by Isabelle Rongier, IAASS President
24