Under the International Space Station's designation as a facility of the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, Nanoracks has an agreement with NASA to send payloads from academic and private sources for installation on the ISS' experiment racks or deployment from the equipment airlock in the JapaneseKibō module. Limitations on NASA's use of the JAXA facility created a bottleneck, prompting Nanoracks to develop their own airlock to increase satellite deployment capabilities.[10] NASA also uses the Bishop Airlock to dispose of trash.[11] Astronauts and cosmonauts simply dump their trash via the airlock and the trash is thrown out and burned up in the atmosphere of Earth. This helps out the chronic problem of having to keep trash inside all of the modules for months at a time while waiting for a cargo spacecraft to dump the trash.[8]
A Space Act Agreement between NASA and Nanoracks to develop a private airlock was signed in May 2016,[6] and the Nanoracks–Boeing plan to build and launch the module by 2019 was approved in February 2017.[7] Originally manifested to launch on SpaceX CRS-19 in late 2019,[12] the module was later re-manifested to launch on SpaceX CRS-21.[3]
The airlock is a four-cubic meter bell-shaped canister that attaches to the Tranquility module.[1] It does not have hatches, instead the Canadarm2 connects to either of the two grapple fixtures in order to move the airlock on or off the station's berthing port which does have a hatch.
The second grapple fixture allows the airlock and its contents to be carried along the main truss on the Mobile Base System.
Airlock operations at ISS
Typical Airlock Sortie for satellite deployment:[1]
Payload satellite and deployer loaded into Airlock – Crew
^ ab"A New Doorway to Space". NASA. 16 November 2020. Retrieved 23 December 2020. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ). Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).