BS EN 16602-40:2018
$215.11
Space product assurance. Safety
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2018 | 82 |
This Standard defines the safety programme and the safety technical requirements aiming to protect flight and ground personnel, the launch vehicle, associated payloads, ground support equipment, the general public, public and private property, the space system and associated segments and the environment from hazards associated with European space systems.
This Standard is applicable to all European space projects.
This standard may be tailored for the specific characteristic and constraints of a space project in conformance with ECSS-S-ST-00.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
2 | undefined |
11 | 1 Scope |
12 | 2 Normative references |
13 | 3 Terms, definitions and abbreviated terms 3.1 Terms from other standards 3.2 Terms specific to the present standard |
15 | 3.3 Abbreviated terms |
16 | 3.4 Nomenclature |
17 | 4 Safety principles 4.1 Objective 4.2 Policy 4.2.1 General 4.2.2 Implementation |
18 | 4.3 Safety programme |
19 | 5 Safety programme 5.1 Scope 5.2 Safety programme plan |
20 | 5.3 Conformance 5.4 Safety organization 5.4.1 Safety manager 5.4.2 Safety manager access and authority 5.4.2.1 Access |
21 | 5.4.2.2 Authority 5.4.3 Safety audits 5.4.4 Approval of documentation 5.4.5 Approval of hazardous operations 5.4.6 Representation on boards |
22 | 5.4.7 Safety approval authority 5.5 Safety risk assessment and control 5.6 Safety critical items 5.7 Project phases and safety review cycle 5.7.1 Safety program tasks and reviews 5.7.1.1 Mission analysis/Needs identification – Phase 0 |
23 | 5.7.1.2 Feasibility – Phase A 5.7.1.3 Preliminary definition – Phase B |
24 | 5.7.1.4 Detailed definition, production and qualification testing – Phase C/D |
25 | 5.7.1.5 Utilization – Phase E |
26 | 5.7.1.6 Disposal – Phase F 5.7.2 Progress meetings 5.7.3 Safety reviews |
27 | 5.8 Safety compliance demonstration 5.9 Safety training 5.9.1 General 5.9.2 Product specific training |
28 | 5.9.3 General awareness briefings 5.9.4 Basic technical training 5.9.5 Training records 5.10 Accident-incident reporting and investigation 5.11 Safety documentation 5.11.1 General |
29 | 5.11.2 Safety data package 5.11.3 Safety deviations and waivers 5.11.3.1 Request for deviation or waiver 5.11.3.2 Assessment of deviation or waiver |
30 | 5.11.3.3 Acceptance by the safety approval authority 5.11.3.4 Review and disposition 5.11.4 Safety lessons learned 5.11.5 Documentation of safety critical items |
31 | 6 Safety engineering 6.1 Overview 6.2 Safety requirements identification and traceability 6.3 Safety design objectives 6.3.1 Safety policy and principles 6.3.2 Design selection |
32 | 6.3.3 Hazard reduction precedence 6.3.3.1 General 6.3.3.2 Hazard elimination 6.3.3.3 Hazard minimization 6.3.3.4 Hazard control |
34 | 6.3.4 Environmental compatibility 6.3.5 External services 6.3.6 Hazard detection – signalling and safing |
35 | 6.3.7 Space debris mitigation 6.3.8 Atmospheric re-entry 6.3.9 Safety of Earth return missions |
36 | 6.3.10 Safety of human spaceflight missions 6.3.11 Access 6.4 Safety risk reduction and control 6.4.1 Severity of hazardous event and function criticality |
38 | 6.4.2 Failure tolerance requirements 6.4.2.1 Basic requirements |
39 | 6.4.2.2 Redundancy separation 6.4.2.3 Failure propagation 6.4.3 Design for minimum risk 6.4.3.1 General 6.4.3.2 Safety factors |
40 | 6.4.3.3 Fracture control 6.4.3.4 Materials 6.4.4 Probabilistic safety targets |
41 | 6.5 Identification and control of safety-critical functions 6.5.1 Identification 6.5.2 Inadvertent operation 6.5.3 Status information 6.5.4 Safe shutdown and failure tolerance requirements |
42 | 6.5.5 Electronic, electrical, electromechanical components 6.5.6 Software functions 6.5.6.1 Software criticality 6.5.6.2 Analysis of safety-critical software 6.5.6.3 Assignment of software criticality category |
43 | 6.5.6.4 Software development |
44 | 6.6 Operational Safety 6.6.1 Basic requirements 6.6.2 Flight operations and mission control 6.6.2.1 Launcher operations 6.6.2.2 Contamination 6.6.2.3 Flight rules |
45 | 6.6.2.4 Hazardous commanding control 6.6.2.5 Mission operation change control 6.6.2.6 Safety surveillance and anomaly control 6.6.2.7 Hazardous debris, fallout and impact control 6.6.3 Ground operations 6.6.3.1 Applicability |
46 | 6.6.3.2 Initiation 6.6.3.3 Review and inspection 6.6.3.4 Hazardous operations 6.6.3.5 Launch and landing site |
47 | 6.6.3.6 Ground support equipment |
48 | 7 Safety analysis requirements and techniques 7.1 Overview 7.2 General |
49 | 7.3 Assessment and allocation of requirements 7.3.1 Safety requirements 7.3.2 Additional safety requirements 7.3.3 Define safety requirements – functions 7.3.4 Define safety requirements – subsystems 7.3.5 Justification 7.3.6 Functional and subsystem specification 7.4 Safety analyses during the project life cycle |
50 | 7.5 Safety analyses 7.5.1 General 7.5.2 Hazard analysis |
51 | 7.5.3 Safety risk assessment 7.5.4 Supporting assessment and analysis 7.5.4.1 General |
52 | 7.5.4.2 Warning time analysis 7.5.4.3 Caution and warning analysis 7.5.4.4 Common-cause and common-mode failure analysis |
53 | 7.5.4.5 Fault tree analysis 7.5.4.6 Human error analysis |
54 | 7.5.4.7 Failure modes, effects and criticality analysis 7.5.4.8 Zonal analysis |
55 | 8 Safety verification 8.1 General 8.2 Hazard reporting and review 8.2.1 Hazard reporting system 8.2.2 Safety status review 8.2.3 Documentation |
56 | 8.3 Safety verification methods 8.3.1 Verification engineering and planning 8.3.2 Methods and reports 8.3.3 Analysis 8.3.4 Inspections 8.3.4.1 General 8.3.4.2 Preflight inspections |
57 | 8.3.4.3 Inflight inspections 8.3.5 Verification and approval 8.4 Verification of safety-critical functions 8.4.1 Validation 8.4.2 Qualification |
58 | 8.4.3 Failure tests 8.4.4 Verification of design or operational characteristics 8.4.5 Safety verification testing 8.5 Hazard close-out 8.5.1 Safety assurance verification |
59 | 8.5.2 Hazard close-out verification 8.6 Declaration of conformity of ground equipment |