System Engineering

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Systems

Engineering
An Introduction
Outline
 What is “SE”?
 Why “SE”?
 Where it can be?

 How “SE”?(A big question)


 A Generic SE process
What is a ‘System’?

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s ct rica
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Avio Hy
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i ca l dra
c h a n ul ics
Me
What is a ‘System’?
 A group of components that work together for
a specified purpose
• Components - products (hardware,
software, firmware), processes, people,
information, techniques, facilities, services
and other support elements
• Together – integration of many
• Purpose – is achieved by implementing
many functions
Other

Systems

Natural Man made

Technical Non – Technical


Aircraft Economic system
Missile Societal systems
… …

Emphasis on Technical systems


Technical Systems
 Human-made artifacts
 Result of engineering activities with the
processes of engineering design
 Difficult to classify systems based on
technology like electrical system, mechanical
system
• Most present day systems are hybrids of simple
systems of the past
 An indication of the need to use inter-
disciplinary approach
What is “Engineering”?
 Knowledge of mathematical and natural
sciences applied to utilize limited
resources economically for the benefit of
people
• Scientific approach
• Optimize resources
• User/customer in focus

Classical Engineering focused mainly on


product design
Systems Engineering (SE)
 SE is an interdisciplinary approach
and means to enable realization of
successful systems
• It is very quantitative including tradeoff,
optimization, selection and integration of
products from various engineering
disciplines
• It is more of an engineering discipline.
Why SE (cont..)
 More systematic way of development
 Better control of System Development incl.
management of risk, changes, configuration
 Traceability at all levels
 Operational & supportability aspects
 Effectiveness Analysis
 Risk management

 Operational - Maintainability, Availability, Safety


etc

Ensures FINAL PRODUCT Fully Meets All User


Requirements
Systems Engineering (SE)
 Emphasis on
• Top-down approach
• Interdisciplinary approach
• Effort on more complete definition of
system requirements
• Life cycle engineering approach
Emphasis in SE
 Top-down approach
• Look at system from top
• Decide inputs/outputs taking into account the
supersystem
• Decide subsystems
… down to lower levels
 Interdisciplinary approach
• Analytical approach is inadequate
• Capture the interactions between disciplines
• Exploit the synergism of these interactions
Emphasis in SE
 More complete definition of needs
• Complete definition of needs facilitates verification of system performance
• Minimize surprises at later stages

 Life cycle engineering approach


• Initial approach was Design cycle
• Later with Design for Manufacture (DFM) approach Manufacturing cycle also included
• Present thinking is to consider three life cycles i.e. Design, Manufacturing and Supportability concurrently
• Leading to Concurrent Engineering (CE)
Life-cycle engineering approach
Development phase Utilization phase
NEED

Conceptual & Detail Design Production Product use


Design Preliminary & and/or Phase out and
Design Development Construction Disposal

Manufacturing Manufacturing
Manufacture Configuration Operations
Design

Product support Product support


Deployment configuration design and maintenance
and development
Product life cycle
Identification of need Research Input

Conceptual design
System concept
Preliminary Design
Subsystem design
Detailed Design & Development
Component design
Production/Construction
Development phasing
Utilization & Support

Phase-out and Disposal


Systems Engineering process
Basic steps
 Define system objectives (user’s needs)
 Establish performance requirements
(requirements analysis)
 Establish functionality (functional analysis)
 Evolve design and operation concepts (design
synthesis)
 Select a baseline (thro’ trade-off studies)
 Verify the baseline meets requirements
 Iterate the process through lower level trades
(decomposition)
INPUT Requirements Functional
analysis R analysis

V D
Design
Synthesis

System Analysis &


OUTPUT Control

Concept studies
System studies
Prelim. Design
Detailed Design
Conceptual design
Requirement
Preliminary design
analysis
Detailed design &
Functional analysis
Development
Design Synthesis
System analysis
and control
Development
phasing

Development
System Production
Engineering Deployment
Management Operation
System Support
Engineering Life cycle Training
process approach Verification
Disposal

This interaction shows how to apply SE process to


develop systems in life cycle approach
Aids to SE Management
Functional baseline
Allocated baseline
(‘Design to’ specs.)
Drawing inputs from
Product baseline
all the life cycle
(‘Build to’ specs.)
activities for various
Development development phases
phasing

Lifecycle
Baselines
planning
System
Engineering
Management
System
Engineering Life cycle
Integrated approach
process
approach

Integrated team
from Systems
engineering and
discipline specialists
System Engineering
Hierarchy
World
View

Domain
View

Element
View

Component
View

19
Product Engineering Hierarchy

Product Requirements
Engineering

System
Component
Engineering
Human Hardware Software Database
Engineering Engineering Engineering Engineering

Analysis
Data and Modeling
Function Behavior
Classes

Design
Data/Class Architectural Interface Component Modeling
Design Design Design Design

Construction

20
What is a system?
 A group of components that work together for a
specified purpose e.g. Aircraft
• Purpose is achieved by implementing many functions
• System is made up of components, attributes and
relationships
• Components are the operating parts consisting of
input, process and output e.g. Wing
• Components may be structural, flow or operating
• Attributes are the properties that characterize the
system e.g. Lift generated
• Relationships are links between components and
attributes
• The purposeful action by system is its function.

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