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The Dragon Architecture is the code name for the Architecture of a Mission Enterprise for Digital Thread approaches. It leverages concepts like Quantitative Engineering, Software Defined Systems and Engineering Information Science built on COTS platforms that emphasize Internet-based standards and protocols for User Experience, Scale and Interoperability.

Quantitative Engineering is the transformation of traditional engineering practices into formalized executable representations such that the engineering work being done can now be performed in an entirely quantitative manner.

Software Defined Systems is an extension of Quantitative Engineering where by the engineering models are cohesive enough to be used to represent the complete product or system of products. This representation becomes the embodiment of requirements and design of the system or product.

Both of these are based on the Executable Systems Engineering Methodology - ESEM.

The Dragon Architecture centers around the concept of Formal Explicit Qualification, which is rooted in the utilization of the Change Package framework and Digital Threads.

It's important to emphasize that the Dragon Architecture maintains a complete neutrality towards the specifics of the modeling methodology adopted. Its sole purpose is to elucidate the manner in which models can be seamlessly integrated with both documents and software systems.

Crucially, Dragon doesn't mandate the existence of a centralized model. Rather, it hinges on the ability to harness models for establishing connections with code. It remains incumbent upon individual projects to determine the approach, if any, they wish to adopt in this regard.

An illustration of the Dragon concept is the engineering document (e.g. System Design Descriptions, Interface Control Documents), which stands as an exemplar of a model-based document. However, it's imperative to note that engineering document serves merely as an instance and not a comprehensive representation.

Often the realm of control software and their models is disconnected from systems engineering. This underscores the pivotal role and inherent worth of generating code and tests bolstered by explicit traceability. Behavioral models, such as those depicting scenarios, exemplify this paradigm.

The decision to model scenarios and the methodologies employed therein is distinctly a project-specific prerogative, separate from the framework set forth by Dragon. The crux of Dragon's contribution lies in delineating the precise process through which these models undergo unequivocal traceability within the qualification trajectory.

It is pertinent to highlight that the entirety of Dragon adheres to RDF compatibility, making it adaptable to any Model-Based representation. The framework refrains from imposing any requirements specific to representation, be it in relation to models, documents, or any other aspect.

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1TI3yCW0IY8bf1hpzo6q9fckAajlojNGI3DIVdtIs9tA/edit?usp=drive_link

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Q_wptZbCiBShi-Hnl9uOUvwioVIYB2lX/view?usp=drive_link

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