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OverviewThere has been a lot of innovation in systems engineering and some fundamental advances in the field of optics, imaging, lasers, and photonics that warrant attention. This volume focuses on applications, tools, and techniques of systems engineering‑related topics from government, industrial, and academic settings such as development and operations (DevOps), agile methods, and the concept of the “digital twin.” Handbook of Systems Engineering and Analysis of Electro‑Optical and Infrared Systems: Applications, Tools, and Techniques offers more information on the application of decision and risk analysis and statistical methods in systems engineering such as design of experiments (DOX) methods, including statistical process control, hypothesis testing, analysis of variance, blocking, 2k factorial analysis, and regression analysis. It includes new material using model‑based systems engineering and systems architecture methods in a system‑level design application. The integration of recent high‑speed atmospheric turbulence research results in the optical technical examples and case studies to illustrate the new developments is also included. A presentation of new optical technical materials for adaptive optics (AO) and atmospheric turbulence compensation (ATC) systems that are based on illumination from passive sources (natural light) or active sources (coherent light like from lasers) provides the technical focus for the systems engineering methods and techniques. Chapter 13 focuses on the technical aspects of the design process and uses the systems-level design as an illustration. In addition to covering lifecycle cost estimation methods and applying them to an integrated case study that is used to illustrate important concepts and techniques throughout this work, the final section brings everything together in terms of technical, cost, and schedule performance. Because this volume blends modern‑day systems engineering methods with detailed optical systems analysis and applies these methodologies to EO/IR systems, this new edition is an excellent text for professionals in STEM disciplines that work with optical or infrared systems. It’s also a great practical reference text for the practicing engineer and a solid educational text for graduate‑level systems engineering, engineering, science, and technology students. Full Product DetailsAuthor: William Wolfgang Arrasmith (Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: CRC Press Edition: 2nd edition ISBN: 9781041035206ISBN 10: 1041035209 Pages: 825 Publication Date: 30 June 2025 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsSection 1: Application of Systems Engineering Tools, Methods, and Techniques to Optical Systems. 1. Problem Definition. 2. Feasibility Studies, Trade Studies, and Alternative Analysis. 3. Systems and Requirements. 4. Maintenance and Support Planning. 5. Technical Performance Measures and Metrics. 6. Functional Analysis and Detector Cooling. 7. Requirements Allocation. 8. Introduction to System Design. 9. Quality Production and Manufacturing. 10. Optical Systems Testing and Evaluation. 11. Optical System Use and Support. 12. Disposal and Retirement of Optical Systems. Section 2: Bringing it all Together…. 13. Bringing it all together …. 14. Bringing it all together: Integrated Lifecycle Cost & Schedule Estimate (ILCaSE) in Systems Engineering. 15. Appendix: Mathematical Formulas.ReviewsAuthor InformationDr. William Wolfgang Arrasmith is currently a professor in the Department of Mathematics and Systems Engineering at FIT. He has 20 years of experience with government research and development programs and has had extensive exposure to electro‑optical, infrared, and laser detection systems. Before his position at Florida Tech, Dr. Arrasmith served as program manager of Physics and Electronics at the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) in Washington, DC. In 1997, he moved to the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland to teach courses in Engineering and Linear Adaptive Optics. He was then reassigned to the Air Force Technical Applications Center (AFTAC) at Patrick Air Force Base where he became chief of the Systems and Technology Division. He was later appointed division chief for the Advanced Science and Technology Division of the AFTAC and remained in the position until joining Florida Tech in 2003. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |