NASA-STD-7009
STANDARD FOR MODELS AND SIMULATIONS
| Organization: | NASA |
| Publication Date: | 11 July 2008 |
| Status: | inactive |
| Page Count: | 58 |
scope:
Purpose
This standard was developed in response to Action 4 from the 2004 report "A Renewed Commitment to Excellence," which stated the following:
"Develop a standard for the development, documentation, and operation of models and simulations
a. Identify best practices to ensure that knowledge of operations is captured in the user interfaces (e.g., users are not able to enter parameters that are out of bounds),
b. Develop process for tool verification and validation, certification, reverification, revalidation, and recertification based on operational data and trending,
c. Develop standard for documentation, configuration management, and quality assurance,
d. Identify any training or certification requirements to ensure proper operational capabilities,
e. Provide a plan for tool management, maintenance, and obsolescence consistent with modeling/simulation environments and the aging or changing of the modeled platform or system,
f. Develop a process for user feedback when results appear unrealistic or defy explanation."
Subsequently, in 2006, the NASA Chief Engineer provided the following further guidance:
g. "Include a standard method to assess the credibility of the models and simulations presented to the decision maker when making critical decisions (i.e., decisions that effect human safety or mission success) using results from models and simulations,
h. Assure that the credibility of models and simulations meet the project requirements."
Each of the requirements and recommendations in this standard
can be traced to one or more of the eight objectives listed above.
The traceability matrix of the requirements in this standard to the
eight objectives can be found online upon accessing this standard
at URL http://standards.nas
These eight objectives are encapsulated in the overall goal for
this standard, which is to ensure that the credibility of the
results from M&S is properly conveyed to those making critical
decisions. Critical decisions based on M&S results, as defined
by this standard, are those technical decisions related to design,
development, manufacturing, ground, or flight operations that may
impact human safety or program/project-defi
This standard addresses aspects of M&S that are common across NASA activities. Disciplinespecific details of M&S should be addressed in future documents, such as Recommended Practices (usually entitled "Handbooks" in the NASA document hierarchy), and are not included in this standard.
The scope of this standard covers the development and maintenance of models, the operation of simulations, the analysis of the results, training, recommended practices, the assessment of the M&S credibility, and the reporting of the M&S results. Some of the key features of this standard are requirements and recommendations for verification, validation, uncertainty quantification, training, credibility assessment, and reporting to decision makers; also included are the crosscutting areas of documentation and configuration management (CM).
The requirements/recomme
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