Naval Ship Distributed System Vulnerability and Battle Damage Recovery in Early-Stage Ship Design

Abstract

Survivability is a critical naval ship design capability. Because of its complexity and perceived requirement for detail, survivability, particularly distributed system survivability, is rarely considered until preliminary design or later. This research has developed a simplified approach using a system network architecture framework to add primary subdivision, primary structure, locate mission-critical components, optimize system architecture and component sizing, and perform vulnerability and recoverability (fight-through) analysis sufficient to make these early design decisions considering survivability.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 09, 2020
Accession Number
AD1114064

Entities

People

  • Alan Brown

Organizations

  • Virginia Tech

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Ground and Sea Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Abstracts
  • Availability
  • Classification
  • Computing System Architectures
  • Contracts
  • Department Of Defense
  • Governments
  • Information Operations
  • Instructions
  • Military Research
  • Monitoring
  • Network Architecture
  • Recovery
  • Security
  • Ship Design
  • Standards
  • Survivability
  • Universities
  • Virginia
  • Vulnerability

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Cybersecurity.
  • Distributed Systems and Data Platform Development
  • Marine Hydrodynamics