10th International Workshop on Planning and Scheduling for Space (IWPSS 2017) 15-16 June 2017

This workshop is the 10th in a regular series that started in 1997 at Oxnard, California and included San Francisco (2000), Houston (2002), Darmstadt, Germany (2004), Baltimore (2006), Pasadena (2009, co-located with IJCAI), Darmstadt (2011), Moffett Field (2013), Buenos Aires (2015, co-located with IJCAI 2015, and now Pittsburgh (2017, co-located with ICAPS 2017), 15-17 June 2017.

For information and proceedings of 1997-2013 meetings see IWPSS Archive at ESTEC Robotics, for 2015 information and proceedings see: IWPSS 2015 Information and Proceedings

IWPSS focuses on the challenges and opportunities facing the planning and scheduling community when addressing the needs of a wide range of space-based applications.

Over the past 20 years since the first workshop in the series, planning and scheduling systems have been successfully deployed to mission ground systems as well as onto spacecraft. In many cases, these deployments have documented cost reduction, increased science returns, and enabling new types of scientific observations. Yet, future missions still do not consider automation by default. An improved infusion process is motivated by the need for planning and scheduling technologies to support an increasingly large, complex suite of missions at ever shrinking costs. This will be even more acute as net-centric observatories emerge. This workshop will specifically focus on ways to infuse planning and scheduling technologies into the evolving set of operational space missions.

The topics covered in this workshop will be of particular interest to scientists involved in space engineering, in Artificial Intelligence, and also to those who work in other, non space-related disciplines, which intersect with techniques with planning & scheduling for space. The intention of the workshop organizers is to stimulate the exchange of ideas between these groups, providing the former with new tools, and the latter two with incentive for continuing their research with space applications in mind.