An architectural framework for distributed naval ship systems
Dorian Brefort (University of Michigan)
Colin Shields (University of Michigan)
Agnieta Habben Jansen (TU Delft - Mechanical Engineering)
Etienne Duchateau (TU Delft - Mechanical Engineering)
Rachel Pawling (University College London)
Koen Droste (TU Delft - Mechanical Engineering)
Ted Jaspers (Student TU Delft)
Michael Sypniewski (University of Michigan)
Conner Goodrum (University of Michigan)
Mark A. Parsons (Virginia Tech)
Mustafa Yasin Kara (Virginia Tech)
Mark Roth (Student TU Delft)
David J. Singer (University of Michigan)
David Andrews (University College London)
Hans Hopman (TU Delft - Mechanical Engineering)
Alan Brown (Virginia Tech)
Austin A. Kana (TU Delft - Mechanical Engineering)
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Abstract
This paper introduces a framework for analyzing distributed ship systems. The increase in interconnected and interdependent systems aboard modern naval vessels has significantly increased their complexity, making them more vulnerable to cascading failures and emergent behavior that arise only once the system is complete and in operation. There is a need for a systematic approach to describe and analyze distributed systems at the conceptual stage for naval vessels. Understanding the relationships between various aspects of these distributed systems is crucial for uninterrupted naval operations and vessel survivability. The framework introduced in this paper decomposes information about an individual system into three views: the physical, logical, and operational architectural representations. These representations describe the spatial and functional relationships of the system, together with their temporal behavior characteristics. This paper defines how these primary architectural representations are used to describe a system, the interrelations between the architectural blocks, and how those blocks fit together. A list of defined terms is presented, and a preliminary set of requirements for specific design tools to model these architectures is discussed. A practical application is introduced to illustrate how the framework can be used to describe the delivery of power to a high energy weapon.