[Paper] Development of a Structured Approach for Establishing Mission Engineering Requirements

Published: (June 3, 2026 at 11:28 PM EDT)
2 min read
Source: arXiv

Source: arXiv - 2606.05651v1

Overview

This paper addresses the question: How can mission effectiveness be systematically defined or approximated in the absence of customer requirements? Legacy requirements engineering frameworks presuppose customer input to define specifications but leave a gap in the process when stakeholder input is ill-defined or missing. Rapid build and development programs (such as military acquisition, space assets, infrastructure projects, etc.) often see requirement and objective evolutions throughout the proposal process, so a more adaptive method is needed. To address this gap, a structured approach is proposed that decomposes mission intent into mission context, functions, constraints, critical dimensions, effectiveness attributes, and architecture alternatives. This method conducts a mission feasibility assessment, prioritizes mission-critical dimensions using Best-Worst Scaling, and introduces a mission complexity factor to quantitatively understand the impacts of external mission difficulties, technology maturity, evidence and confidence standards, and mission utility. The resulting method provides a traceable basis for deriving Tier 1 and 2 requirements. The approach is structured to support future Unified Architecture Framework (UAF) and Systems Modeling Language (SysML) artifact integration. The proposed framework is demonstrated using a notional close air support mission example.

Key Contributions

This paper presents research in the following areas:

  • eess.SY
  • cs.SE

Methodology

Please refer to the full paper for detailed methodology.

Practical Implications

This research contributes to the advancement of eess.SY.

Authors

  • Taylor C. Fazzini
  • Daniel R. Herber

Paper Information

  • arXiv ID: 2606.05651v1
  • Categories: eess.SY, cs.SE
  • Published: June 4, 2026
  • PDF: Download PDF
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