CP-4(5) - Contingency Plan Testing | Self-challenge

Employ [Assignment: organization-defined mechanisms] to [Assignment: organization-defined system or system component] to disrupt and adversely affect the system or system component.


ID: CP-4(5)
Enhancement of : CP-4

Space Segment Guidance

A self-challenge method for contingency plan testing can help uncover hidden vulnerabilities in spacecraft operational procedures, especially when human-driven or environmental anomalies are hard to replicate. In practice, one might embed challenge injects within the satellite simulator or digital twin environment, automatically triggering unexpected system states such as simulated sensor faults or partial communication failures. Operators are then forced to execute contingency protocols in real-time, without prior notice, helping to validate whether the plan and its associated training can handle genuine emergencies. Space vehicles often have intricate fault management systems that must be tested in ways that reflect realistic operational stressors—particularly those involving radiation upsets or thermal anomalies. By routinely running self-challenge drills, an organization gains more confidence in the spacecraft’s ability to enter safe modes, maintain partial functionality, and communicate status to ground controllers under the most severe conditions.