bowtie definition

This commit is contained in:
Robin Clark 2010-09-15 12:42:13 +01:00
parent ccc0ac927f
commit 16c7f38581
2 changed files with 31 additions and 10 deletions

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@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ For the Nuclear power station
\subsection{Timing And Safety Checking}
\subsubsection{CANopen Timing Definitions}
CAN is a mainstream network and was internationally standardized (ISO 118981) in 1993.
CANopen is a protocol suite based on the hardware of the CANbus\cite{canspec}.
CANbus is a hardened differential serial communications bus and
is arbitration free\footnote{Implemented at the physical and data link layers using DOMINANT and PASSIVE bits, with self monitoring and auto back off

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@ -259,14 +259,36 @@ consider DC as being in the set of components i.e. $DC \in \mathcal{C}$
\subsection{Defining the analysis process \\ as a function}
It is useful to define this analysis process as a function.
Defining the function `$\bowtie$' to represent the {\em symptom abstraction} process,
and DCFM to represent derived component failure modes, we may now
write
Where $\mathcal{F}$ is the set of all sets of failure modes, and $\mathcal{DC}$
is the set of all derived components, we can define the symptom abstraction process thus:
$$
%\bowtie : SubSystemComponentFaultModes \rightarrow DerivedComponent
\bowtie : \mathcal{F} \rightarrow \mathcal{DC}
$$
\paragraph{Extending $\bowtie$ to {\dcs}}
It is useful to further define the $\bowtie$ function, to
take the failure modes from derived components (as well as base components)
and return a new derived component.
This generalises the function $\bowtie$ and allows us to build
hierarchical failure mode models.
Where a {\fg} is composed of derived components, for sake of example
Where $DC_1, DC_2, DC_3 $ are {\dc}'s and $DCFM$ is a set of failure modes thus
$FG = \{ DC_1, DC_2, DC_3 \}$ and $DCFM = FM(FG)$
We can apply the symptom abstraction process $\bowtie$
to the failure mode set $DCFM$.
The case
where a {\fg} has been created from {\dcs}
using function `$\bowtie$' leads us to
{\dc}'s at a higher level of fault abstraction.
$$
%\bowtie : SubSystemComponentFaultModes \rightarrow DerivedComponent
\bowtie : DCFM \rightarrow DerivedComponent
\bowtie : DCFM \rightarrow DC
$$
%
%\begin{equation}
@ -275,10 +297,9 @@ $$
%
%or applying the function $fm$ to obtain the $FG_{cfm}$ set
%
To put this in context, where DC is a derived component, and FG is a functional group,
we may state the process of extracting a set of failure modes from a functional
group thus:
To put this in context, where FG is a functional group, sourced from base or derived components,
we may state the process of
analysing the failure modes in the {\fg} and returning a {\dc} thus:
\begin{equation}
\bowtie(fm(FG)) = DC
\end{equation}