Book Image

Systems Engineering Demystified

By : Jon Holt
Book Image

Systems Engineering Demystified

By: Jon Holt

Overview of this book

Systems engineering helps us to understand, specify, and develop complex systems, and is applied across a wide set of disciplines. As systems and their associated problems become increasingly complex in this evermore connected world, the need for more rigorous, demonstrable, and repeatable techniques also increases. Written by Professor Jon Holt – an internationally recognized systems engineering expert – this book provides a blend of technical and business aspects you need to understand in order to develop successful systems. You'll start with systems engineering basics and understand the complexity, communication, and different stakeholders' views of the system. The book then covers essential aspects of model-based systems engineering, systems, life cycles, and processes, along with techniques to develop systems. Moving on, you'll explore system models and visualization techniques, focusing on the SysML, and discover how solutions can be defined by developing effective system design, verification, and validation techniques. The book concludes by taking you through key management processes and systems engineering best practices and guidelines. By the end of this systems engineering book, you'll be able to confidently apply modern model-based systems engineering techniques to your own systems and projects.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to Systems Engineering
4
Section 2: Systems Engineering Concepts
8
Section 3: Systems Engineering Techniques
14
Section 4: Next steps

Introducing methodologies

Methodologies are an important part of any systems engineering endeavor. Methodologies sit firmly in the Approach section of the MBSE in a slide diagram that has been referred to throughout this book.

Methodologies may include aspects of both frameworks and process sets but differ from frameworks and process sets in that they will define more details regarding actual techniques that may be used at specific points in a process, or they will define specific views in a framework. For example, a process will define the activities that need to be executed and the artifacts that must be created by such activities. However, a typical process does not go into detail about how each activity should be realized, as there may be many ways to do so. It may be, for instance, that a specific methodology uses a particular notation and toolset, whereas another methodology may realize the same activity using a different notation and toolset.

There are two main methodologies...