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Publication details
Model Checking for Proving and Improving Fault Tolerance of Satellites
Authors | |
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Year of publication | 2023 |
Type | Article in Proceedings |
Conference | 2023 IEEE AEROSPACE CONFERENCE |
MU Faculty or unit | |
Citation | |
Doi | http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/AERO55745.2023.10115801 |
Description | Developing the Fault Detection, Isolation & Recovery (FDIR) policy often happens late in the design phase of a spacecraft and might reveal significant gaps in the redundancy concept. We propose a process for continuously analyzing and improving the architecture of a spacecraft throughout the design phase to ensure successful fault isolation and recovery. The systems engineer provides a graph of the system's architecture containing the functional modes, the hardware components, and their dependency on each other as an input and gets back a weakness report listing the gaps in the redundancy concept. Overlaying the sub-graphs for every fault scenario allows us to reason about the feasibility of fault isolation and recovery. The graph is automatically converted to a Markov Decision Process for use with a model checker to generate a control policy for the FDIR process. The model is optimized by pruning inefficient branches with Monte Carlo Tree Search. We export this policy as a decision tree that ensures explainability, fast execution, and low memory requirements during runtime. We also generate C-code for fault isolation and reconfiguration that can be integrated in the FDIR software. The tool was used on system architectures created in the Modular ADCS project which is part of ESA's GSTP program. In this context, it helped to yield an effective redundancy concept with minimum overhead and dramatically reduce the programming effort for FDIR routines. Since we use model checking for the analysis, the designer gains formal verification of the robustness towards faults. |