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Engineering Design with SPIDR

Engineering Design with SPIDR. Tatiana Kichkaylo with Dave Barnhart and Lucy Hoag USC Information Sciences Institute. Background. Funded as ISI Inter-divisional seedling Space Engineering Research Center + Artificial Intelligence

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Engineering Design with SPIDR

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  1. Engineering Design with SPIDR Tatiana Kichkaylo with Dave Barnhart and Lucy Hoag USC Information Sciences Institute

  2. Background • Funded as ISI Inter-divisional seedling Space Engineering Research Center + Artificial Intelligence = Spacecraft Portal for Integrated Design in Real time • Driven by user needs • SERC is building satellites, fast, cheap, with student power ("teaching hospital" model) • SPIDR is there to help Systems Platform for Integrated Design in Real time

  3. Design problem • Spacecraft missions are typically “one-off” designs, requiring high degree of non-recurring engineering between even similar design states • Spacecraft design is highly interdisciplinary, and follows many sets of constraints and rules dictated by environment, payload and mission sets • Components and design approaches can be reused • Engineering knowledge can be encoded to automate many design choices and analysis steps • "Paperless" design helps directly and also provides basis for further automation • Ultimately want to let individual engineers bounce ideas of a computer system, leading to faster, cheaper and better designs Blueprints Purchase orders Launch dates … Blueprints Purchase orders Launch dates … Blueprints Purchase orders Launch dates … Magic

  4. What does it take to build a spacecraft? Flight software Mission goals Geometry/mass Delivery schedules Design Power Launch Component providers Export regulations Payload Orbit Manufacturing capabilities Vibration Thermal Validation and testing(software and hardware)

  5. Bigger picture • Collaborative design • Information sharing and clash detection • Optimization of parameters • Limited number of parameters but with high fidelity • Project management • Schedules and resources • SPIDR • Automate roll out and propagation of dependencies • Optimize over structures given high-level specification • Very lightweight and driven by project needs

  6. Idea: Use planning • AI planning is about finding a sequence (DAG) of actions that achieve a goal • Methods have preconditions • Methods expand parts of the plan • Design is about finding a set of recipes that convert a specification into a complete design • Recipes have applicability conditions • Recipes modify (expand) design • Both methods and recipes have parameters • Both plans and designs have constraints • Constraints in design are often represented as models

  7. Design loop Reusable data Reusable component database Reusable knowledge base of engineering rules Mission-specific data Mission requirements, orbit Optimization metrics SPIDR User revises requirements and metrics as needed Automated design synthesis N best designs (component lists and system budgets)

  8. Rule example

  9. Implementation User interface SPIDR Optimization engine Planning layer Tokens and rules Planner Constraint layer Variables and constraints Constraint propagation iLands Semantic layer Semantic entities Query engine Constants Data representation Algorithms P. battery Mission req's

  10. SPIDR meets real world • Nanosatellite project at USC ISI • Low costs • Unusual constraints • Reality alters trajectory • Initial "vision" for SPIDR • Single optimization tool with models in the loop • Actual use • Run every several days with design files (XML etc.) posted online • Got several extensions, model tweaked constantly • Useful for dealing with ripple effects and ensuring consistency • Users want more

  11. Observations • No way to close all loops • Extended to dynamic models (e.g., power profile) • Stuck on thermal and geometry due to • Lack of APIs • Licensing issues • Need for user interaction • One shot is not enough – need Living Design • Feed back from out-of-the-loop models, version control • Side-by-side designs • Project structure and scheduling roll out • Still want the optimization loop

  12. Observations (2) • Rule design is not easy • Engineers understand the concept • Tools help: Eclipse plug-in • Crossing domain boundary is hard • Tweaks and overrides encourage local thinking • SPIDR Lite to study the knowledge engineering problem • Other applications:Trade space studies and tools for acquisition • SPIDR-Energy for undersea surveillance (DARPA)

  13. Last slide • SPIDR is about rolling out engineering recipes and optimizing over high-level structures • Glue for collaborative design, optimization, and project management • SPIDR is driven by real project(s) • Some ambitions got scaled down • New extensions and ideas emerged • Next steps • New [engineering] domains • New applications • More users (students?) Tatiana Kichkaylo tatiana@isi.edu

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