Safety requirements for Hyperloop transportation systems: Applying NASA human spaceflight safety practices
Abstract
Hyperloop transportation systems represent an emerging technological frontier with the potential to revolutionize both passenger and freight transportation through high-speed rail transit. However, as is common with nascent technologies, there is no consensus on the best approach to design and operate these systems safely or on the appropriate level of safety integration. Consequently, industry stakeholders find themselves lacking clear regulatory guidance for this rapidly advancing field. Drawing from the wealth of safety expertise developed by NASA over the past several decades in the realm of space exploration, it becomes evident that this robust safety methodology can effectively address safety concerns within the Hyperloop concept. Moreover, it can lay the foundation for a potential certification process that regulatory agencies can adopt. Within this investigation, the safety case approach is applied to scrutinize the Hyperloop system, comparing it to the first published industry standard for Hyperloop systems. By employing this approach, space exploration experience from program development and successful operation as well as from lessons learned from anomaly investigations is leveraged to identify numerous hazards that are not properly addressed from the published standard. This underscores the need for a more comprehensive safety framework to ensure the secure development and operation of Hyperloop transportation systems.
Copyright and License
© 2023 International Association for the Advancement of Space Safety. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Acknowledgement
The authors wish to acknowledge the contribution of Tommaso Sgobba who had the original idea to apply space safety requirements to the Hyperloop transportation system, given the similarities in the mission operational environment. They also appreciate his continued support and useful input through the project.
Additional Information
11th IAASS Conference Student Paper Finalist.
Micah Nishimoto, University of Southern California, was selected as a student finalist for this paper which was presented at the 11th IAASS Conference, Managing Risk in Space, held October 19–21, 2021.
Additional details
- Available
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2023-10-25Available online
- Available
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2023-11-27Version of record
- Caltech groups
- GALCIT
- Publication Status
- Published