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@ -35,6 +35,24 @@ and checks will be made, and finally a component or a low level sub-system
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will be found to be faulty.
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A natural fault finding process is thus top~down.
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Top down fault isolation/finding techniques are described in \ref{NETWORKDECOMPOSITION}.
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%% insert diagram here
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\begin{figure}[h]
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\centering
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\includegraphics[width=300pt,bb=0 0 587 445,keepaspectratio=true]{./top_down_de_comp.jpg}
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% top_down_de_comp.jpg: 587x445 pixel, 72dpi, 20.71x15.70 cm, bb=0 0 587 445
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\caption{Top Down Failure De-Composition Diagram}
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\label{fig:tdh}
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\end{figure}
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\subsection{Top-Down System De-Composition}
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A top down fault analysis system will take a system and divide it into
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several sub-systems, and determine the safety dependencies
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of the System on those sub-systems. In the case of large complicated
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Systems, the sub-systems themselves may be broken down into simpler sub-systems.
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A top down hierarchy is shown in figure \ref{fig:tdh}.
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\subsection{FMMD - Bottom~up Analysis}
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The FMMD technique does not follow the `natural fault finding' or top down approach,
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it instead works from the bottom up.
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