Entering a Lunar Outpost - Credit: NASA 10th IAASS Conference - Program

CONFERENCE PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Chair / Co-Chairs

I. Rongier G. Gafka T. Ujino

W. Ailor M. Kezirian

Members

J. Bacon R. Jakhu M. Metz

T. Beard J. Jeevarajan J. Pelton

F. Bittner B. Kanki T. Pfitzer

A. Chang-Armstrong P. Kirkpatrick T. Sgobba

M. Ciancone J. Kreimer M. Skinner

A. Del Bianco T. Kuusiholma (FI) M. Stroud

L. Francillout L. Landon N. Takeuchi

R. Fusaro S. Lemmens P. Wilde

M. Glissman T. Lips U. Wirt

A. Hobbs J-B Marciacq G. Wyss

D. Howard C. Mattes T. Yoshihara

D. Isakeit D. McKnight

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ABOUT THE CONFERENCE

The tenth IAASS Conference “Making Safety Happen” is an invitation to reflect and exchange information on a number of topics in space safety and sustainability of national and international interest. The conference is also a forum to promote mutual understanding, trust, and the widest possible international cooperation in such matters. The once exclusive “club” of nations with autonomous space access capabilities is becoming crowded with fresh, and ambitious new entrants. New T. Ujino commercial spaceports and near-spaceports are starting operations and many others are being built or planned.

In the manned spaceflight arena, a commercial market is now a reality with government use of commercial services for cargo and crew transportation to orbit, and with possible plans for mixed government and commercial operations on Moon missions. Besides the national ambitions in space, the international cooperation both civil and commercial is also gaining momentum.

Space bound systems and aviation traffic are sharing more and more a crowded airspace, while aviation is increasingly relying on space-based safety-critical services. New systems may soon populating the near-space region (18-160 km) thus requiring the definition of an “ad-hoc” legal regime for such intermediate region. Air launches are a new important segment of the launch business that require the establishment of ICAO regulations. Finally, most nations own nowadays space assets of various kind and purpose, which are under the constant threat of collision with other spacecraft and with the ever- increasing number of space debris. Awareness is increasing internationally (as solemnly declared since decades in space treaties) that space is a mankind asset and that we all have the duty of caring for it. Considering the impact of the upcoming deployment of huge constellations to provide internet services, without proactive and courageous international initiatives to establish an international regulatory framework for space traffic management we risk negating access and use of space to future generations.

In addition to normal sessions, the 10th IAASS Conference will dedicate a set of panel sessions to four topics which need to get better attention in space programs: International Space Traffic Management, Space Sustainability, Launch Approval Using the Safety Case, and International Cooperation.

IAASS Conferences T. Sgobba [email protected]

IAASS Administration G. Elfering [email protected]

International Association for the Advancement of Space Safety Kapteynstraat 1 2201BB Noordwijk The Netherlands Phone: +31(0)712020023 Mob. : +31(0)643552918

Conference website: http://iaassconference2019.space-safety.org/

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CONFERENCE SPONSORS AND ORGANIZERS

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10 TH INTERNATIONAL SPACE SAFETY CONFERENCE MAKING SAFETY HAPPEN

15-17 May 2019 El Segundo - Los Angeles, California (USA)

Program

The Aerospace Corporation 2350 E. El Segundo Blvd. El Segundo, CA 90245-4691 USA

5 Eugene L. Tu Maj. Gen. John T. Rauch Carlos Augusto Teixeira de Moura NASA's Ames Research Center United States Air Force Brazilian Space Agency (AEB) Director Chief of Safety and Commander Air Force President Safety Center

Takumi Ujino Bernard Chemoul Kathryn Lueders Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) French Space Agency (CNES) NASA Commercial Crew Program Chief Officer Safety & Mission Assurance Inspector General Program Manager

James W. Wade Peter Martinez Herve Gilibert Raytheon Secure World Foundation ArianeGroup Vice President, Mission Assurance Executive Director Chief Technical Officer 10th IAASS Conference - Program

CONFERENCE AGENDA 10TH IAASS CONFERENCE - MAKING SAFETY HAPPEN

Wednesday, 15 May 2019

08:30am - 10:30am P1: Plenary Session

Welcome Message: Steve Isakowitz The Aerospace President and CEO

Lt. Gen. John F. Thompson (10 min) Commander, Space and Missile Systems Center Air Force Space Command, Los Angeles Air Force Base Conference Isabelle Rongier Introduction: IAASS President

Keynote Speakers: Dr. Eugene Tu NASA Ames Center Director

Carlos Augusto Teixeira De Moura President Brazilian Space Agency

Takumi Ujino Associate Director General and Senior Chief Officer S&MA, JAXA

Dr. James Wade Vice President Mission Assurance, Raytheon

10:30am - 11:00am Coffee Break

11:00am - 12:30pm S-01: Re-entry Safety – I

Effect of Latitude Bias in Entry Angle on Ground Casualty Risk from Naturally Decaying Space Objects Chris Ostrom NASA Orbital Debris Program Office / HX5, United States of America Seasonal- and Beta-Angle-Dependent Latitude Bias Variations in Natural Decays John Bartlett Bacon NASA, United States of America

Probabilistic Casualty Risk Assessment and Labeling for the Re-Entry of Spacecraft Components Tobias Lips, Patrik Kärräng HTG GmbH, Germany

Update of the 5 EPC Test Case with the Fragmentation and Survivability Tool Suite Of ArianeGroup Célia Finzi, Grégory Pinaud, Charles Bertorello, Jean-Marc Bouilly, Laurent Chevalier ArianeGroup, France

11:00am - 12:30pm S-02: Human Performance for Safety & Organizational Culture – I

Capability Considerations for Enhancing Safety on Long Duration Manned Missions: Insights from a Technical Interchange Meeting on Autonomous Crew Operations Shu-Chieh Wu1,2, Alonso H. Vera2 1San Jose State University, United States of America; 2NASA Ames Research Center, United States of America

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Safety on Site - Operating a Test Facility for a Flight Stage Michael Dommers, Andreas Haberzettl DLR, Germany STRATOFLY Academy: Inspire Young Professionals and Get Inspired by New Ideas Roberta Fusaro, Nicole Viola Politecnico di Torino, Italy

11:00am - 12:30pm S-03: Nuclear Space Safety

Overview of the Issues Related to the Use of Radioisotope Power Systems in European Space Missions Christophe Fongarland1, Cédric Lemarié1, Nathalie Dias1, Laurent Jourdainne2, Alessandra Barco3, Richard Ambrosi3, Keith Stephenson4 1ArianeGroup, France; 2Arianespace, France; 3University of Leicester - Dept. of Physics & Astronomy, United Kingdom; 4European Space Agency - ESTEC TEC-EP, The Netherlands An Opinion: Radioisotope Material Launch Approval Requirements Mark Glissman USAF, United States of America Risk Integration and Uncertainty Evaluation Process of the Mars 2020 Launch Curtis Smith1, Kurt Vedros1, James Knudsen1, Don Marksberry2, Robin Sullivan3, James Rogers4 1Idaho National Laboratory, United States of America; 2Nuclear Regulatory Commission, United States of America; 3Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, United States of America;4 National Aeronautics and Space Administration, United States of America

11:00am - 12:30pm S-04: Panel Session

Space Traffic Management

12:30pm - 2:00pm Lunch Break

2:00pm - 3:30pm S-05: Space Debris – I

A Handbook for Post-Mission Disposal of Satellites Less Than 100 kg Darren S McKnight IAI, United States of America D-Orbit’s Decommissioning Technologies as an Effective Mechanism Enabling Compliance with Current and Future Space Debris Mitigation Requirements and Standards Catherine Doldirina, Stefano Antonetti, Luca Rossettini, Lorenzo Ferrario D-Orbit SpA, Italy A Clearer View of Orbital Debris Joseph Anthony Carroll PlaneWave Instruments, United States of America Enhanced Space Safety by Active Removal of Dead LEO Satellites and Debris Jerome Pearson1, Joseph A. Carroll2, Eugene M. Levin3 1Star Technology and Research, Inc., United States of America; 2Tether Applications, Inc.; 3Electrodynamic Technologies

2:00pm - 3:30pm S-06: Laws, Regulations & Standards – I

Outer Space SARPs: A Mechanism for Implementation of Space Safety Standards Gilles Doucet Spectrum Space Security Inc., Canada Space Safety Law and the Guardians of the Galaxy: the UK Perspective Thomas Alexander Walker Blake Morgan LLP (law firm), United Kingdom

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Fragmentation Evaluation of the Future European Launcher in the Near-Field and Far-Field Nathalie Dias, J-F. Pallegoix, C. Finzi, C.Bertorello ArianeGroup, France The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) as the Competent International Organization for Safety and Security Issues in Suborbital Flights Georgia Maria {Yolanda} Kalogirou McGill University, Canada

2:00pm - 3:30pm S-07: Designing Safety – I

Safety Considerations for SPIcDER: Spacesuit Integrated Carbon Nanotube Dust Ejection/Removal System Kavya Manyapu1, Leora Peltz2, Pablo De Leon3 1The Boeing Company, United States of America; 2The Boeing Company, United States of America; 3University of North Dakota Development of a New Method for Evaluation of Materials Flammability in Space by FLARE Project Masao Kikuchi1, Yasuyuki Hanaki1, Tomoyuki Nukui1, Makiko Fukuda2, Yuji Kan1, Yasuhiro Nakamura1, Tetsuya Sakashita1, Shuhei Takahashi3, Osamu Fujita4 1Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan; 2Intec Co., Ltd., Japan; 3Gifu University, Japan; 4Hokkaido University, Japan Investigation of Broom-Straw Fracture Behavior of Aluminum Alloy 2024 Debris Recovered from _Columbia_ Ngozi C. Ubani Ochoa, Darren M. Cone, Stephen W. Stafford, John D. Olivas Center for the Advancement of Space Safety and Mission Assurance Research (CASSMAR), The University of Texas at El Paso, United States of America Hypersonic Vehicle Safety Review (title TBC) Khooshboo Dani, Swapnil Surdi, Cameron Lorek, Michael Kezirian University of Southern California, United States of America

2:00pm - 3:30pm S-08: Panel Session

International Cooperation on Moon Program

3:30pm - 4:00pm Coffee Break

4:00pm - 6:00pm S-09: Risk Assessment & Management

A Method for Tracking and Communicating Aggregate Risk Through the Use of Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE)/Model-Based Mission Assurance (MBMA) Tools Scott Darpel1, Tim Ferlin1, Sean Beckman1, Maria Havenhill1, Edith Parot1, Kathy Harcula2 1NASA, United States of America; 2Bastion Technologies MBSE Methodology to Support a Safety and Reliability Assessment of a Thermal Control System of a Hypersonic Transportation Vehicle Roberta Fusaro, Nicole Viola, Laura Babetto Politecnico di Torino, Italy Main Challenges and Goals of the H2020 STRATOFLY Project Roberta Fusaro, Nicole Viola Politecnico di Torino, Italy Design-Based Safe Operable Metrics for Earth Regime RPO David Barnhart, Rahul Rughani, Jeremy Allam University of Southern California, Space Engineering Research Center

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4:00pm - 6:00pm S-10: Launch Safety – I

Rafael's TRSAT Development Update Ronen Ingbir, Nave Ben-Yakov, Dima Kanevsky, Meir Cohen, Mark {Moty} Harmats, Noga Tzviel Rafael, Israel Safety Challenges for Commercial Launch Operators Jerry Mark Haber Acta LLC, United States of America Trajectory Innovative Real-time Equipment for Space Intelligent Anomalies Surveillance using Supervised Machine Learning (TIRESIAS) Victoria Da-Poian1, Gérald Grucker2 1ISAE Supaero, Toulouse, France; 2CNES CSG Kourou, Guyane Française Levels of Rigor for Launch and Reentry Safety Analysis Erik W F Larson, Angela M. Linn-Nelson, Jerry Haber ACTA, LLC, United States of Americ Improved Correlation of Uncertainty within Trajectory Sets Tyler Johannes Gras, Erik W.F. Larson, Elliot James Porterfield ACTA LLC, United States of America

4:00pm - 6:00pm S-11A: National Space Programs & Safety

Part 1: Republic of Armenia Part 2: Federation of Malaysia

4:00pm - 6:00pm S-11: Space Traffic Control – I

The Global Risk Continuum (GRC) - What Should Keep You Up at Night Darren S McKnight1, John A Macdonald1, Joseph Pelton2, Rohit Arora1, Peter Martinez3, Chris Kunstadter4 1IAI; 2Independent Consultant; 3Secure World Foundation; 4AXA Risk, Safety and Reliability in Operations: The Intellectual Structure of a Research Field Riccardo Patriarca, Francesco Costantino, Giulio Di Gravio Sapienza University of Rome, Italy Improvement of Formation Flying System Based on a Bottom-Up Approach RAMS Analysis Marta Fernández Campo, Isabel Bachiller Martínez, Juan Antonio Béjar Romero GMV Aerospace and Defense S.A, Spain The First On-Orbit Demonstration of an ELROI Satellite License Plate David M. Palmer, Rebecca M. Holmes, Charles T. Weaver Los Alamos National Laboratory, United States of America

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Thursday, 16 May 2019

8:30am - 10:30am S-12: Design of Systems for Safe Launch Operations

Design of Systems for Safe Launch Operations Hugh Charles Dischinger. Jr NASA/MSFC, United States of America Human Factors Design of Ground Launch Systems (Abstract TBD) Damon Stambolian NASA Kennedy Space Center, United States Human Factors in Ground Processing: Lessons from Aircraft Maintenance Alan Neville Hobbs SJSU Foundation at NASA Ames Research Center, United States of America NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Tools for Human Factors Engineering Assessments for Safe Worksites Tanya Cole Andrews NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, United States of America

8:30am - 10:30am S-13: Re-entry Safety – II

Demisability of Various Reinforced Polymer Components of Reentering Orbital Debris: Phase I Test Results Benton Robb Greene1, Christopher M Sanchez2 1Jacobs JETS Contract, NASA Johnson Space Center, United States of America 2Applied Research Associates, Inc., United States of America Investigation of Material Response to Atmospheric Re-Entry Exposure of Sub-Structural Ti-6Al-4V Components Recovered from Space Shuttle _Columbia_ Ngozi C. Ubani Ochoa, Arlene C. Smith, Darren M. Cone, Stephen W. Stafford, John D. Olivas Center for the Advancement of Space Safety and Mission Assurance Research (CASSMAR), The University of Texas at El Paso, United States of America Hazards of Reentry Disposal of Satellites from Large Constellations William H. Ailor The Aerospace Corpoation, United States of America

8:30am - 10:30am S-14A: Designing Safety – II

A Risk-Based Approach for Implementing Safety and Mission Assurance when Using Commercial Heritage in Human-Rated Systems Timothy Joseph Ferlin, Scott Darpel, Maria Havenhill NASA, United States of America Evolution of Crew Safety Criteria for Future Manned Space Transportation Systems Aline Decadi HE Space at European Space Agency, France E-Nose: Measuring Surface Microbial Contamination and Oxidative Stress of Cosmonauts - Results and Future Applications Jan Grosser1, Joachim Lenic1, Sergey Kharin2, Dmitry Tsarkov2, Yuri Smirnov2, Natalia Novikova2, Lana Moukhamedieva2, Michael Dolch3, Andrei Kornienko4, Robin Nitzer4, Peter Roth4, Ulrich Reidt4, Andreas Helwig4, Viktor Fetter4, Thomas Hummel4 1German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany; 2Institute of Biomedical Problems (IBMP), Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS), Russia; 3Hospital of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Germany; 4Airbus Defence and Space, Germany Safety Assessment of Suborbital Vehicles Marcel Lariviere ISSF Graduate Student Fellowship

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Challenges and Opportunities of International Cooperation for Safety & Mission Assurance (SMA) on the European Service Module (ESM) of the Orion Program Michael Ciancone1, Richard Chase2, Horst Tjaden3, Brian VanGenderen4, Mark Hyatt1 1NASA, United States of America; 2European Space Research and Technology Centre, The Netherlands; 3Airbus Defence and Space, Germany; 4Lockheed Martin, United Stated of America

8:30am - 10:30am S-14: Space Traffic Control – II

Space Traffic and Frequency Management and Control in the New Space Environment Joseph N. Pelton IAASS, Executive Board He Launch Collision Avoidance Analysis (LCOLA) in JAXA Shinichi Wada, Ryotaro Kaneko, Hajime Taguchi, Kazutomi Ishihara Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan Launch Collision Avoidance Analysis for Korea Space Chang Su Park Korea Aerospace Research Institute, Republic of Korea

10:30am - 11:00am Coffee Break

11:00am - 1:00pm S-15: Designing Safety – III

Trends in Human Spaceflight: Failure Tolerance, High Reliability and Correlated Failure History Carrie L. Green1, Maria A. Havenhill2, John O. Bobanga3, Deboshri Sadhukhan4 1NASA, United States of America; 2NASA, United States of America; 3NASA, United States of America; 4NASA, United States of America Hypersonic Reusable Transportation Systems: A Way to Reduce Risk to Access Low Earth Orbits Roberta Fusaro, Nicole Viola, Valeria Vercella Politecnico di Torino, Italy Human Error Analysis (HEA) for Human-Rated Space Systems. What Is It, and How Can It Be Done? John O'Hara1, Alan Hobbs2, Cynthia Null3, Charles Dischinger3 1Brookhaven National Laboratory; 2SJSU Foundation at NASA Ames Research Center; 3National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Human Factors Engineering Analysis of Various Hatch Sizes Tanya Cole Andrews, Rebecca Stewart, Walter Deitzler NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, United States of America

11:00am - 1:00pm S-16: Panel Session

Launch Approval Using the Safety Case Approach

11:00am - 1:00pm S-17: Re-entry Safety – III

Rebuilding of Destructive Hypersonic Tests on Honeycomb Sandwich Panels with PAMPERO Julien Annaloro1, Vincent Rivola2, Martin Spel2, Sergey Drozdov3, Stéphane Galera4, Pierre Omaly1 1CNES, France; 2RTECH, France; 3TSAGI, Russia; 4ALTRAN, France High-fidelity Spacecraft-oriented Re-entry Safety Analysis Code of JAXA: LS-DARC Keiichiro Fujimoto, Hideyo Negishi, Toshiaki Daibo, Nobuyuki Iizuka, Ryuzo Shimizu, Koichi Okita Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan On the Re-Entry of Large Artificial Space Objects and Resulting Footprint Estimation Stijn Jan Jo Lemmens, Silvia Sanvido European Space Agency DEBRISK V3: CNES Tool Evolutions for Re-Entry Risk Analysis Pierre Omaly CNES, France

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11:00am - 1:00pm S-18: Laws, Regulations & Standards – II

The New Safety Review System about Launching Rocket in Japan Hiroaki Sakai JAXA, Japan Plume Effect Assessment on the Future European Launcher Ariane 6 Nathalie Dias, Y. Domaine ArianeGroup, France Governance for Space Safety: Binding and Secondary Norm Creation Lucien Rapp, Cristiana Santos Universite Toulouse Capitole, SRIUS, France Overview of Act on Launching of Spacecraft, etc. and Control of Spacecraft in Japan Tetsuya Morimoto1, Toru Hara1, Gaku Saito1, Shuji Yamaguchi1, Masami Miki2, Yuki Fukuchi2, Daiki Tanaka2, Masako Kikuchi2, Koji Oga2 1National Space Policy Secretariat (NSPS) Cabinet Office (CAO), Government of Japan;2 Japan Manned Space Systems Corporation (JAMSS), Japan The Case for a Space Safety Institute Tommaso Sgobba IAASS, Netherlands, The

1:00pm - 2:30pm Lunch Break

2:30pm - 4:00pm P2: Plenary Session – Keynote Addresses

Maj. Gen. John T. Rauch, Chief of Safety and Commander Air Force Safety Center, USAF

Bernard Chemoul, Inspector General French Space Agency (CNES)

Kathryn Lueders, NASA Commercial Crew Program, Program Manager

Herve’ Gilibert, Chief Technical Officer, ArianeGroup

Dr. Peter Martinez, Executive Director, Secure World Foundation

4:00pm - 4:30pm Coffee Break

4:30pm - 6:00pm S-19: Space Debris – II

A Study on Safety Requirement for On-Orbit Servicing Missions Hiroki Onodera JAXA, Japan Modular Damage Detection for Expandable and Inflatable Structures Mark E Lewis1, Tracy L Gibson2, Pedro J Medelius3 1NASA Kennedy Space Center, United States of America; 2Southeastern Universities Research Association; 3ASRC Federal Space and Defense Characterization of Aerospace Materials Related to Orbital Debris Using Reflectance Spectroscopy Jacqueline Andrea Reyes, Darren Cone The University of Texas at El Paso, United States of America The Analysis and Study on the Sudden-happened Events Correlated with Space Debris Ronglan Wang National Space Science Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences, People's Republic of China

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4:30pm - 6:00pm S-20: Launch Safety – II

A Safe Cost Effective Approach for Testing Ariane 6 Flight Software Philippe Gast, Cyrille Pierre ArianeGroup, France The Development of Improved Flight Safety Analysis System for NURI Test Vehicle Kyusung Choi1, Hyungseok Sim2, Sangyeon Cho3 1KARI, Korea, Republic of (); 2KARI, Korea, Republic of (South Korea); 3KARI, Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Innovative Flight Safety Strategies for New Launcher Vehicles Alexandra Martinez Torio CNES, France Flight Abort Criteria to Ensure Public Safety during Commercial Launch and Reentry Operations in the US Paul D. Wilde, Tom Ricketson Federal Aviation Administration, United States of America

4:30pm - 6:00pm S-21: Designing Safety – IV

In-Situ Meso-Scopic Modeling and Analysis of Composite Overwrap in COPVs Jiakun Liu Cornell University, United States of America Next Generation Methods for Non-Destructive Testing of Spaceflight Hardware Michael T. Kezirian Global Innovations, Inc, United States of America Reliability Considerations for Radioisotope Power Systems Christopher Stanley Rutter Matthes NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, United States of America

4:30pm - 6:00pm S-22: Space Traffic Control – III

Trending Analysis of Historical Conjunction Data Messages Daniel Moomey, Austin Potter, John Chris Mattchet Air Force Safety Center, United States of America Solution of Long-Coast Re-entry COLA Problems with COLA Gap Methods Alan B. Jenkin, John P. McVey, Glenn E. Peterson The Aerospace Corporation, United States of America Integrating Air and Space Traffic Management: Some Safety and Regulatory Issues Sanat Kaul International Foundation for Aviation, Aerospace & Development, India Space Data Integrator Ryan Frodge1, Daniel Murray2 1Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, United States of America; 2Federal Aviation Administration, United States of America

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Friday, 17 May 2019

9:00am - 10:30am S-23: Space Traffic Control – IV

Reducing Outer Space Insecurities: The Case for a United Nations Space Situational Awareness (SSA) Architecture Kiran Krishnan Nair McGill University, Canada Probability Evaluation by Unscented Transform in Launch Collision Avoidance Analysis between Launcher and Manned Spacecraft and Operation Results Ryotaro Kaneko, Shinich Wada, Hajime Taguchi, Kazutomi Ishihara Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan Flight Safety Concepts for EOLE Vincent Jean Marc Bertrand-Noel CNES - Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana

9:00am - 10:30am S-24: Re-entry Safety – IV

SecSWIM – Where Safety Meets Security Frank Morlang German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany An Engineering Model of the Consequences of Debris Collisions on Structures Paul D. Wilde, Sean Stapf Federal Aviation Administration, United States of America Monitoring the Orbital Decay of the Chinese Space Station TIANGONG-1 from the Loss of Control Until the Re-entry into the Earth’s Atmosphere Carmen Pardini, Luciano Anselmo Space Flight Dynamics Laboratory, ISTI-CNR

9:00am - 10:30am S-25A: Panel Session

Space Sustainability

9:00am - 10:30am S-25B: ISSF Design Competition

9:00am - 10:30am S-25: Designing Safety – V

Defining a Safe Reusable Cislunar Transportation Architecture Dallas Bienhoff Cislunar Space Development Company, LLC, United States of America Overcoming Challenges of Using COTS Electrical Devices in Space James Allen Runnells HX5, United States of America Flat-H Redundant Frangible Joint Design Evolution 2018: Feasibility Study Conclusions Jacob French, Chris Brown, Andrew Benjamin, Todd Hinkel, Thomas Diegelman NASA - JSC, United States of America Application and Evaluation of IAASS-SSI-1700 Standards for a Liquid Rocket Laboratory Cameron Lorek1, Eric Perry1, Michael Kezirian2 1University of Southern California, United States of America; 2International Space Safety Foundation

10:30am - 11:00am Coffee Break

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11:00am - 1:00pm S-26: Space Hazards

Should Lack of Imminence Affect Planetary Defense Policy? Nahum Melamed1, Avishai Melamed2 1The Aerospace Corporation, United States of America; 2University of California, Sun Diego, California International Space Station Spacecraft Charging Hazards: Hazard Identification, Management, and Control Methodologies, with Possible Applications to Human Spaceflight Beyond LEO Steven Koontz1, Terri Castillo1, William Hartman2, Schmidl William2, Megan Haught1, Gary Duncan1, Benjamin Gingras2, Jerry Vera2 1NASA Johnson Space Center/ES4, United States of America; 2The Boeing Company, Houston, Texas, United States of America Roadmaps for Space Environment Engineering and Science Applications Paul O’Brien, Josef Koller The Aerospace Corporation, United States of America Space Weather: Big & Small - A Continuous Risk Scott William McIntosh National Center for Atmospheric Research, United States of America

11:00am - 1:00pm S-27: Human Performance for Safety & Organizational Culture – II

Safety Regulations and Standards for the Ergonomics of Commercial Nearspace and Suborbital Aircrafts Referring to Private Transportation Models Norul Ridzuan Zakaria1, Anass Hanafi2, Ivan Cuzzi2, Khairul Azman Hasran3, Mohd Khairul Ikram Shukri3, Ahmadzaidi Karim3, Mohd Amzari Abas4, Muhammad Zaidi Mohtar4, Abdul Rashid Ahmad4, Kamarul Azhar Mohd Yatim5, Jalaludin Abu6, Saharudin Zakaria6, Airon Shah Najmudin6 1SOLVES, Italy; 2Al-Biruni International Space School, Italy; 3SkyE, Malaysia; 4REMPIT, Malaysia; 5FINAS, Malaysia; 6SOLVES, Malaysia Effect of Space Environment on Human Performance and Safety Diana L. DeMott SAIC, United States of America *The Fine Motor Skills and Cognition Test Batteries: Normative Data and Interdependencies* Bettina L. Beard1, Kritina L. Holden2, Albert J. Ahumada1 1NASA, United States of America; 2Leidos

11:00am - 1:00pm S-28A: Launch Safety – III

Risk Management of a Guided Rocket Launch Ronen Ingbir, Evgeny Protopopov, Asaf Schuldenfrei Rafael, Israel Guiana Space Centre General Short and Long Term Landscape Jan Droz1, Nathalie Costedoat2 1CNES, Headquarters, France; 2CNES Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana Improvement of Safety Requirement for Launch Vehicle Payload Safety about Depressurization and Offloading Propellant in Case of Propellant Leakage after Assembling Payload to the Vehicle Kenichi Sato, Tetsuya Nakano, Toru Kasai Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan Launcher Mission Analysis Preparation with Regard to Ariane's Deviated Trajectory Anomaly Isabelle Rongier ArianeGroup, France

11:00am - 1:00pm S-28: Commercial Spaceflight Safety

A Comparative Assessment of Commercially-Developed Space Vehicle Technical Standards Ronald Barry Walden1, Michael Kezirian2 1University of Southern California; 2International Space Safety Foundation

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Providing Assurance in 21st Century Space Transportation - Does Commercialization, Innovation, and Agility Necessarily Equate to a New Paradigm in Safety Assurance? Timothy Grant Riley Sandia National Laboratories, United States of America Safety of Spaceflight Participants Aboard Suborbital Reusable Launch Vehicles Robert William Seibold1, Ronald nmn Young2, Nickolas M. Demidovich3 1The Aerospace Corporation, United States of America; 2NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center, United States of America; 3FAA Office of Commrcial Space Transportation, USA ISS Safety Sustainability Edward Mango Consultant/Professor, United States of America New Applications for Nearspace Airships and Their Operational Safety Norul Ridzuan Zakaria1, Muhammad Nurazmi Abas2, Shafiee Mahat2, Mohd Nazri Nazarudin2, Mohd Haizad Hussain2, Rasila Hamzah2, Norhaizat Zainal Abidin2, Francesco Santoro3, Md Sayuti Ishak4, Norul Rafidi Zakaria5 1SOLVES, Italy; 2Tijan Galaxy Aerospace Consortium, Malaysia; 3ALTEC, Italy; 4University Science Malaysia, Malaysia; 5AMC-Spaceport Malaysia, Malaysia

1:00pm - 2:30pm Lunch Break

2:30pm - 3:15pm P3: Plenary Closing Session Part I

Challenges and Benefits of Performance Requirements for Launch and Re-entry Safety Paul Wilde FAA, United States of America

3:15pm - 4:00pm P4: Plenary Closing Session Part II

Results of the IAASS Space Traffic Management Working Group Mark Andrew Skinner1, Moriba K Jah2, Darren McKnight3, Diane Howard4 1The Aerospace Corp., United States of America; 2University of Texas-Austin; 3Integrity Applications, Inc.; 4Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University

4:00pm - 4:30pm Conference Wrap-Up & Announcements

Isabelle Rongier IAASS President

The Wende Museum of the Cold War: ISSF Social Event, Friday 17 May, 06:00pm - 08:00pm

The Cold War launched the space race, and space cooperation signaled the end of the cold war. The two stories are forever closely intertwined. At the conclusion of the IAASS conference, the International Space Safety Foundation (ISSF), invites you to a social event at a small but unique museum, the Wende Museum of Cold War. Located in an empty Cold War Armory the museum is one of the world's largest collections of Cold War-era ephemera, paraphernalia, artifacts, media, and space related items (a camera hidden in a pen, fake passports, crude satellites, etc.).

Come for wine and light refreshments and learn the connections between the Space race and the Cold War. You can purchase your tickets at: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/space-a-cold-war-frontier-the-issf-at-the-wende-museum-tickets-60859671917

The Wende Museum, 10808 Culver Boulevard, Culver City, CA. 90230

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IAASS AWARDS WINNERS 2019

Jerold M. Haber Jerome Lederer - Space Safety Pioneer Award

Mr. Haber is Vice President of ACTA LLC. Mr. Haber has been engaged in launch and reentry safety modeling, safety criteria development and analyses since 1968. He has pioneered meth- odologies for monitoring the health and status of launch vehicles. His modeling approaches for launch vehicles hazards enable higher fidelity risk evaluations resulting in more flexibility in launch planning. He led the development of vulnerability models for people, ships and aircraft that have become the standard in the industry. Technical lead on modeling and policy formula- tion for RCC 321, Common Risk Criteria for National Test Ranges, over the last 50 years Mr. Haber has been an influential leader and innovator in the development of common standards and criteria for protection of the public. He mentored analysts and modelers; the flight safety analysis training programs he co-developed and co-leads are continuously evolving and are presented in the US and abroad.

Dr. Alonso Vera and the Human Systems Integration Division at NASA Ames Vladimir Syromyatnikov – Safety by Design Award

The Human Systems Integration Division at NASA Ames Research Center enables the development of complex aerospace systems through analysis and modeling of human performance and human-automa- tion interactions. The goal of the Division is to advance human-centered design and operations to make dramatic improvements in safety, efficiency, and mission success. Dr. Alonso Vera is Division Chief of the Human Systems Integration Division. At NASA since 2000, Dr. Vera has worked on basic research in the area of computational cognitive modeling and in applied human-computer interaction leading the devel- opment and deployment of mission systems across NASA robotic and human space flight missions. Alonso Vera received a Bachelor of Science from McGill University and a Ph.D. from Cornell University. During a Post-Doctoral Fellowship in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, he worked in the areas of artificial intelligence and human-computer interaction. He was later an Associate Professor at the University of Hong Kong.

Diana McKissock and 18th Space Control Squadron of U.S. Air Force Joseph Loftus – Space Sustainability Award

The 18th Space Control Squadron (18 SPCS) is responsible for maintaining and provid- ing foundational space situational awareness (SSA) for the U.S. Department of Defense, as well as interagency, commercial and international partners around the globe. Ms. McKis- sock is Lead for the 18 SPCS Mission Assurance Generation branch, which in- cludes SSA sharing, launch conjunction assessment, human spaceflight sup- port, and on-orbit spaceflight safety. In 2009 Diana McKissock, a former U.S. Air Force officer, took a civilian position as a spaceflight safety orbital analyst within the Joint Space Operations Center (JSpOC). As the space- flight safety mission expanded in response to the increase in on-orbit satel- lites and spacefaring nations, Ms. McKissock developed the SSA Sharing Cell to establish a formal office to interface with interagency, commercial, non-U.S. governmental, and academic partners around the world.

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IAASS AWARDS WINNERS 2019

Barbara Kanki Leonardo Da Vinci – Lifelong Achievements Award

Dr. Barbara Kanki served as a NASA Principal Investigator in the Human Systems Integration Division at Ames Research Center for more than 25 years. Her primary expertise in aerospace safety was a focus on work teams and the crew factors that influence team performance in high- risk operations. She conducted human factors research to identify training, procedures and best practices to enhance safety and effectiveness. She managed both flight deck and maintenance human factors projects in NASA Aviation Safety Programs. Dr. Kanki participated on space shuttle assessment teams as well as NASA mishap boards, and provided support to National Transportation Safety Board accident and incident investigations. She received a Behavioral Sciences PhD from the University of Chicago and began her tenure at NASA Ames as a National Research Council postdoctoral associate. She has authored and edited numerous publications associated with peer-reviewed journals, conferences and books. She is editor of the awards winning IAASS textbook Space Safety and Human Performance.

Paul Kirkpatrick Leonardo Da Vinci – Lifelong Achievements Award

NASA Deputy Chief Safety & Mission Assurance Officer for the Commercial Crew Program at the time of his retirement in 2016, after 28 years of service, previously he chaired for 10 years the Shuttle and ISS Ground Safety Review Panel (GSRP) at Kennedy Space Center. In that period Mr. Kirkpatrick was instrumental in establishing a common payloads/cargo ground safety certification procedure for all international launch sites of the ISS program. Mr. Kirkpatrick joined NASA in 1988 leaving the Coast Guard, where he served for 12 years. His first responsibility was coordinating the recovery at sea of Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters. Later he became lead ground safety engineer for hundreds of Space Shuttle payloads such as Advanced Communications Technology Satellite (ACTS), Hubble Telescope Servicing, EURECA Return, Chandra Telescope, multiple SpaceLabs and SpaceHabs.)

Kathryn Lueders Leonardo Da Vinci – Lifelong Achievements Award

Kathryn Lueders is program manager for NASA's Commercial Crew Program. She oversees pro- gram facilitation of commercial spacecraft development and certification to enable the safe trans- portation of astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS). Kathryn Lueders previously served as the ISS Program's Transportation Integration manager. In that post, she managed the commer- cial cargo resupply services (CRS) to the space station and was responsible for oversight of the international partner vehicles – the European Space Agency's Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV), the Japanese Space Agency's H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV), and the Russian and Progress spacecraft. Lueders began her NASA career at the White Sands Test Facility in New Mexico in 1992 where she performed as the Shuttle Orbital Maneuvering System and Reaction Control Sys- tems Depot manager. She has a Bachelor of Business Administration in finance from the University of New Mexico and a Bachelor of Science and Master of Science in industrial engineering from New Mexico State University.

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IAASS AWARDS WINNERS 2019

Tobias Lips IAASS President’s Award

Since 2013, Tobias is Managing Director of HTG (Hypersonic Technology Göttingen) in Germany. HTG was founded in 1989 to be a research and service company focused on experimental and theoretical aspects of satellite aerodynamics and spacecraft re-entry analysis. In 2001, Tobias Lips joined HTG as project engineer, supporting re-entry analyses and software development. He was in charge for the on-ground casualty risk assessment of many European space proj- ects (e.g. ATV, ROSAT, GOCE, Sentinel-1/2/3/5P/6). He also contributed to the development of the European re-entry analysis software tools SCARAB (Spacecraft Atmospheric Re-entry and Aerothermal Break-up) and DRAMA (Debris Risk Assessment and Mitigation Analysis). Since 2007, Tobias is a member of the German/DLR delegation to the IADC (Inter-Agency Space De- bris Coordination Committee). Tobias Lips graduated in aerospace engineering from the Techni- cal University of Braunschweig (Germany) in 2000.

IAASS CONFERENCE & AWARDS GALA DINNER

The Gala Dinner will take place on Thursday 16 May at 7:30pm at Bel-Air Bay Club

Bel-Air Bay Club (Upper Clubhouse) - 16801 Pacific Coast Highway - Pacific Palisades, California 90272

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10th IAASS International Space Safety Conference El Segundo – California (USA), 15-17 May 2019

Wednesday, 15 May 8:30am - 10:30am P1: Plenary Session Chairs: M. Glissman, W. Ailor

Titan

10:30am - 11:00am Coffee Break

11:00am - 12:30pm Session 01: Session 02: Session 03: Session 04: Re-entry Safety – I Human Performance for Safety & Nuclear Space Safety Panel Session: Chairs: Organizational Culture – I Chairs: Space Traffic Management T. Lips Chairs: G. Wyss Chairs: J. Bacon B. Kanki M. Glissman M. Skinner T. Beard M. Jah

Titan-A II Titan-B “Dining Room”

12:30pm - 2:00pm Lunch Break

2:00pm - 3:30pm Session 05: Session 06: Session 07: Session 08: Space Debris – I Laws, Regulations & Standards – I Designing Safety – I Panel Session: Chairs: Chairs: Chairs: International Cooperation on D. McKnight A. Del Bianco M. Kezirian Moon Missions W. Ailor J. Pelton P. Wilde Chairs: G. Gafka T. Sgobba

Titan-A Atlas II Titan-B “Dining Room”

3:30pm - 4:00pm Coffee Break

4:00pm - 6:00pm Session 09: Session 10: Session 11a: Session 11: Risk Assessment & Management Launch Safety – I National Space Programs & Space Traffic Control – I Chairs: Chairs: Safety Chairs: J. Bacon A. Chang-Armstrong Part 1: Republic of Armenia M. Skinner M. Kezirian T. Pfitzer Part 2: Federation of Malaysia T. Kuusiholma Chairs: M. Kezirian T. Sgobba

“Dining Room” Titan-A Atlas II Titan-B Thursday, 16 May 8:30am - 10:30am Session 12: Session 13: Session 14A: Session 14: Design of Systems for Safe Re-entry Safety – II Designing Safety – II Space Traffic Control – II Launch Operations Chairs: Chairs: Chairs: Chairs: T. Lips P. Kirkpatrick M. Jah C. Dischinger P. Omaly A. Del Bianco M. Glissman A. Hobbs

Atlas II Titan-A Titan-B “Dining Room”

10:30am - 11:00am Coffee Break

11:00am - 1:00pm Session 15: Session 16: Session 17: Session 18: Designing Safety – III Launch Approval Using the Re-entry Safety – III Laws, Regulations & Standards – II Chairs: Safety Case Chairs: Chairs: T. Yoshihara Chairs: T. Lips H. Sakai R. Chase T. Pfitzer W. Ailor I. Rongier P. Wilde

Titan-A Titan-B "Dining Room" Atlas II

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1:00pm - 2:30pm Lunch Break and IAASS General Assembly

2:30pm - 4:00pm P2: Plenary Session Chairs: T. Ujino I. Rongier

Titan

4:00pm - 4:30pm Coffee Break

4:30pm - 6:00pm Session 19: Session 20: Session 21: Session 22: Space Debris – II Launch Safety – III Designing Safety – IV Space Traffic Control – III Chairs: Chairs: Chairs: Chairs: L. Francillout T. Pfitzer M. Kezirian M. Metz S. Lemmens I. Rongier R. Fusaro M. Skinner

“Dining Room” Titan-A Titan-B Atlas II

8:00pm - 11:00pm Conference and Awards Gala Dinner – Bel-Air Bay Club, Los Angeles

Friday, 17 May 9:00am - 10:30am Session 23: Session 24: Session 25: Session 25A: Session 25B: Space Traffic Control – IV Re-entry Safety – IV Designing Safety – V Panel Session: ISSF Design Competition Chairs: Chairs: Chairs: Space Sustainability Chairs: M. Skinner T. Lips P. Kirkpatrick Chairs: M. Kezirian M. Jah P. Omaly G. Gafka P. Martinez C. Matthes J. Pelton

Titan-A Titan-B “Dining Room” Atlas II Atlas III

10:30am - 11:00am Coffee Break

11:00am - 1:00pm Session 26: Session 27: Session 28: Session 28A: Space Hazards Human Performance for Safety & Commercial Spaceflight Safety Launch Safety – III Chairs: Organizational Culture – II Chairs: Chairs: N. Melamed Chairs: M. Kezirian T. Pfitzer W. Ailor T. Beard E. Mango A. Chang-Armstrong B. Kanki

Atlas II Titan-A Titan-B “Dining Room”

1:00pm - 2:30pm Lunch Break

2:30pm - 3:15pm Plenary Closing Session Part I: Challenges and Benefits of Performance Requirements for Launch and Re-entry Safety Chairs: I. Rongier T. Yoshiharaa

Titan

3:15pm - 4:00pm Plenary Closing Session Part II: Results of the IAASS Space Traffic Management Working Group Chairs: M. Skinner D. McKnight

Titan

4:00pm - 4:30pm Conference Wrap-Up & Announcement by Isabelle Rongier, IAASS President

6:00pm - 8:00pm Space: A Cold War Frontier, The ISSF at the Wende Museum Social Event organized by the International Space Safety Foundation (ISSF) Location: The Wende Museum 10808 Culver Boulevard Culver City, CA 90230 United States

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IAASS CONFERENCE ROOMS LOCATION:

A1: TITAN (TITAN-A + TITAN-B) ATLAS II ATLAS III

A3 Cafeteria: "DINING ROOM"

23 PROSE Award 2019 of Americanof the Association Publishers SPACE SAFETY and HUMAN PERFORMANCE

Edited by: Barbara Kanki Jean-Francois Clervoy Gro Mjeldheim Sandal

Editor-in-Chief Tommaso Sgobba