Open this publication in new window or tab >>2016 (English)In: Proceedings of the 30th congress of the International Council of the Aeronautical Sciences, International Council of the Aeronautical Sciences , 2016Conference paper, Published paper (Refereed)
Abstract [en]
Model Validation and Verification (V&V) has historically often been considered a final step in the model development process. However, to justify model-based design decisions throughout the entire system development process, a methodology for continuous model V&V is essential. That is, model V&V activities should be fast and easy to reiterate as new information becomes available. Using a high fidelity simulation model of the Environmental Control System (ECS) in the Saab Gripen fighter aircraft as a guiding example, this paper further extends to an existing semiautomatic framework for model steady-state validation developed during ECS model validation efforts. Generic methods for identification of steady-state operation are a prerequisite for steady-state validation of industry grade physics based models against insitu measurements. Four different established methods for steady-state identification are investigated and compared: steady-state conditions on the standard deviation estimated from in-situ measurements, conditions on the variation coefficient, t-test on the slope of a simple regression line, and comparison of differently estimated variances. The methods’ applicability, on ECS measurements in particular, is evaluated utilizing steady-state identification needs defined during Gripen ECS model validation activities.
Model Validation and Verification (V&V) has historically often been considered a final step in the model development process. However, to justify model-based design decisions throughout the entire system development process, a methodology for continuous model V&V is essential. That is, model V&V activities should be fast and easy to reiterate as new information becomes available.
Using a high fidelity simulation model of the Environmental Control System (ECS) in the Saab Gripen fighter aircraft as a guiding example, this paper further extends to an existing semi-automatic framework for model steady-state validation developed during ECS model validation efforts. Generic methods for identification of steady-state operation are a prerequisite for steady-state validation of industry grade physics based models against in-situ measurements. Four different established methods for steady-state identification are investigated and compared: steady-state conditions on the standard deviation estimated from in-situ measurements, conditions on the variation coefficient, t-test on the slope of a simple regression line, and comparison of differently estimated variances. The methods’ applicability, on ECS measurements in particular, is evaluated utilizing steady-state identification needs defined during Gripen ECS model validation activities.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
International Council of the Aeronautical Sciences, 2016
Keywords
Gripen, Steady-state identification, Automating model validation, Historical data validation
National Category
Aerospace Engineering
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-142397 (URN)2-s2.0-85013638563 (Scopus ID)978-3-932182-85-3 (ISBN)
Conference
The 30th congress of the The International Council of the Aeronautical Sciences
Projects
OpenCPS
2017-10-302017-10-302023-01-19