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Chapter 1: Introduction to Systems Engineering April 2012
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Aims of this Lecture To explain what we mean by “Systems Engineering” To discuss the different types of systems which may be encountered To identify which technologies may be applied
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Booklist The textbook for this course is Benjamin S. Blanchard and Wolter J. Fabrycky (2011). Systems Engineering and Analysis (5 th Edition). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 13: 978-0-13- 714843-1.
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What is a system? Functionally related elements which collectively form an identifiable whole (the “system”) The system must itself perform some sort of a function The elements may be physical or conceptual
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Some terminology Components – the elements of which the system is composed Attributes – properties of individual components or of the system as a whole Relationships between (pairs of) components – so that the components interact to support the system’s functionality (common purpose) State – the values of the attributes and relationships at a particular moment in time
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Types of components Structural –Static Operating –Dynamic components which “do the work” Flow –Things which change, such as information or energy
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Attributes of components Color, strength, size, weight, power Network topology Maximum speed Machine on/off Volume of fuel
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Relationships First order –Functionally necessary to both Second order –“synergistic”, the relationship is complementary Redundant –Duplicate components
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Subsystem If system “A” is a component of (larger) system “B”, then “A is a subsystem of B”
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Environment Anything outside the system Input to the system from the environment Output from the system to the environment Throughput is –Input, processed by system, then output
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Types of systems Natural vs. human-made –Also human-modified Physical vs. conceptual –Also systems of systems Static vs. dynamic –Uncertainty in dynamic systems Closed vs. open –Entropy
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Systems Science Science vs. philosophy The Scientific Method Feedback (cybernetics) Homeostasis (biology) “Hierarchy of levels” (Boulding) Systemology – the science of systems –Cybernetics, OR, management science, IS, etc.
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Technical systems Technology embedded in society Manufactured components of a system Classification difficult Continuous change
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History and philosophy Industrial age (1700 onwards) –Reductionism and mechanism –Mechanization –Analytic thinking Post-industrial (systems) age (1950 onwards) –Expansionism –Synthetic thinking –Teleology –Societal organizations
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Engineering Civil, mechanical, electrical, electronic, … Communication Subcontracting Multidisciplinarity → “Systems engineering”
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Systems engineering Various definitions exist Common themes –Top-down approach –Life-cycle –Requirements definition –interdisciplinarity
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Factors to Consider when Constructing a Model Assumptions Simplifications Limitations Constraints Preferences Optimization of some of these factors may be mutually exclusive
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