Systems Engineering
ATC's systems engineering work adapts the standard principles outlined by the International Council on System Engineering to the requirements of our customers' organizations, such as those defined in the FAA's System Engineering Handbook (SEM 3.1).
Our systems engineering group has extensive experience with:
- Trade studies – A trade study is a process for
making logical decisions among design alternatives, and summarizing
the results in well-supported recommendations. Successful trade
studies begin with a clear definition of the objective, select
appropriate evaluation criteria, and perform a comprehensive
search for alternatives. To avoid bias, evaluation criteria are
applied in a fair, consistent manner—preferring, whenever
possible, objective criteria to subjective.
- Interface engineering – Deep roots in network
engineering give ATCorp engineers extensive experience with
the development of interface definition documents, the
evaluation of interface documents written by others, and the
development of software/hardware that conforms to interface
requirements.
- Risk management – ATC has performed several
risk management assignments for the FAA. These include
design and oversight of a risk mitigation process for the
Advanced Automation System that correctly predicted a processor
performance problem early in its design cycle. We also
conducted a safety risk assessment for the
Final Approach Runway Occupancy Signal. That assessment augmented the FAA's
standard risk management approach with a custom-designed
state-transition diagram depicting the system states, both
valid and invalid, and the likely outcome of each. The
state-transition diagram was used to assess technical risk
and develop risk mitigation strategies.
