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Projecting technology change to improve space technology planning and systems management
Authors:Steven Robert Walk
Institution:1. Dipartimento di Matematica e Fisica, Seconda Università di Napoli, Viale Lincoln 57, I-81100 Caserta, Italy;2. Istituto di Scienze Applicate e Sistemi Intelligenti “E. Caianiello” ISASI-CNR, Via Campi Flegrei 34, Pozzuoli, Napoli I-80078, Italy;3. Istituto per le Applicazioni del Calcolo “Mauro Picone” IAC-CNR, Via Pietro Castellino 111, I-80131 Napoli, Italy;4. Scuola Politecnica e di Scienze di Base, Università di Napoli “Federico II”, Piazzale Tecchio 80, I-80125 Napoli, Italy;1. Department of Forest Sciences, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 27, 00014 Helsinki, Finland;2. The Finnish Forest Research Institute, P.O. Box 18, 01301 Vantaa, Finland
Abstract:Projecting technology performance evolution has been improving over the years. Reliable quantitative forecasting methods have been developed that project the growth, diffusion, and performance of technology in time, including projecting technology substitutions, saturation levels, and performance improvements. These forecasts can be applied at the early stages of space technology planning to better predict available future technology performance, assure the successful selection of technology, and improve technology systems management strategy.Often what is published as a technology forecast is simply scenario planning, usually made by extrapolating current trends into the future, with perhaps some subjective insight added. Typically, the accuracy of such predictions falls rapidly with distance in time. Quantitative technology forecasting (QTF), on the other hand, includes the study of historic data to identify one of or a combination of several recognized universal technology diffusion or substitution patterns. In the same manner that quantitative models of physical phenomena provide excellent predictions of system behavior, so do QTF models provide reliable technological performance trajectories.In practice, a quantitative technology forecast is completed to ascertain with confidence when the projected performance of a technology or system of technologies will occur. Such projections provide reliable time-referenced information when considering cost and performance trade-offs in maintaining, replacing, or migrating a technology, component, or system.This paper introduces various quantitative technology forecasting techniques and illustrates their practical application in space technology and technology systems management.
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