1. Systems Engineering (SE) Definition: Systems Engineering is an interdisciplinary approach to designing, integrating, and managing complex systems over their life cycles. It focuses on defining customer needs, documenting requirements, and ensuring systems meet performance, cost, and schedule constraints. 2. Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) Definition: MBSE is an advanced approach to SE that uses digital models (rather than documents) as the primary means of system representation, analysis, and communication. It enhances collaboration, reduces errors, and improves traceability.
A course covering UML and SysML fundamentals provides a foundation in these two modeling languages, equipping students with the ability to visualize and understand system designs, particularly for software and systems engineering. UML is widely used for software development, while SysML is a more specialized language for system engineering, building upon UML
A course overview for Model-Based System Engineering (MBSE) with SysML would typically cover the fundamentals of MBSE, including how it differs from traditional systems engineering, and then delve into SysML as the modeling language used in MBSE. The course would likely explore how models are used to support requirements, design, analysis, verification, and validation throughout the system lifecycle. It would also cover the benefits of using MBSE and SysML in complex systems development.
This course is for new IBM Engineering Requirements Management DOORS (DOORS) users. It introduces basic DOORS concepts and functionality. It includes hands-on exercises that teach users to create, edit, manipulate, and analyze requirements data in DOORS