Difference between revisions of "Safety engineering"

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[[Safety Engineering]] is the science that assures that a life-critical system behaves as needed even when the component fails. Ideally, safety engineers take an early design of a system, analyze it to find what faults can occur, and then propose safety requirements in design specifications up front and changes to existing systems to make the system safer.
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[[Safety engineering]] is the science that assures that a life-critical system behaves as needed even when the component fails. Ideally, safety engineers take an early design of a system, analyze it to find what faults can occur, and then propose safety requirements in design specifications up front and changes to existing systems to make the system safer.
  
 
==Definitions==
 
==Definitions==
  
According to [[Organizational Behavior by Robbins and Judge (17th edition)]],
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According to the [[FAA AMT Handbook]],
 
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:[[Safety Engineering]]. Science that assures that a life-critical system behaves as needed even when the component fails. Ideally, safety engineers take an early design of a system, analyze it to find what faults can occur, and then propose safety requirements in design specifications up front and changes to existing systems to make the system safer.
::[[Safety Engineering]]. Science that assures that a life-critical system behaves as needed even when the component fails. Ideally, safety engineers take an early design of a system, analyze it to find what faults can occur, and then propose safety requirements in design specifications up front and changes to existing systems to make the system safer.
 
  
 
==Related concepts==
 
==Related concepts==

Revision as of 10:09, 8 November 2019

Safety engineering is the science that assures that a life-critical system behaves as needed even when the component fails. Ideally, safety engineers take an early design of a system, analyze it to find what faults can occur, and then propose safety requirements in design specifications up front and changes to existing systems to make the system safer.

Definitions

According to the FAA AMT Handbook,

Safety Engineering. Science that assures that a life-critical system behaves as needed even when the component fails. Ideally, safety engineers take an early design of a system, analyze it to find what faults can occur, and then propose safety requirements in design specifications up front and changes to existing systems to make the system safer.

Related concepts

Related lectures