The US Orbital Segment consists of 10 pressurized modules. Of these, seven are habitable, and three are connecting nodes with large ports. The ports are used to connect the modules together or provide berths and docks for spacecraft.
Nodes Each of the nodes has ports called
Common Berthing Mechanisms (CBM). All three nodes have 4 ports around their exterior, and 1 port on each end, 6 ports in total. In addition to the 18 ports on the nodes there are additional ports on the modules, most of these are used for mating modules together, while unused CBM ports can berth one of the re-supply spacecraft MPLM, HTV, Dragon Cargo or Cygnus. There are two
PMA adapters that change CBM ports to
docking ports, the type used by Soyuz, Progress, Automated Transfer Vehicle, and the former Space Shuttle.
Unity The first component of the USOS pressurized segment is the
Unity. On the aft end of
Unity is the
Pressurized Mating Adapter (PMA) 1. The PMA-1 connects
Unity with the
Russian segment. Unity is also connected to the
Quest airlock on the starboard side,
Tranquility on the port side, and the Z1 truss on the
zenith. The
Destiny lab connects to the forward end, leading to the rest of the USOS.
Unity is also used by the crews on board the ISS to eat meals and share some downtime together. The
Unity node was delivered to the station by
STS-88 on December 6, 1998.
Harmony The
Harmony is the central connecting node of the USOS.
Harmony connects to the
Destiny lab aft end,
Kibo lab to the port side, and
Columbus lab to the starboard side. The
Harmony node's nadir and zenith ports also serves as the berthing port for
H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV),
Dragon and
Cygnus resupply vehicles. On the forward end of
Harmony is PMA-2, which was used by visiting
Space Shuttles as a mating adapter and by future crewed missions to the ISS. On July 18, 2016, aboard SpaceX CRS-9, NASA launched the International Docking Adapter-2, to convert the Shuttle
APAS-95 docking adapter to the
NASA Docking System, to be used with
SpaceX Dragon 2 and
Boeing Starliner.
Harmony was delivered by the
STS-120 mission on October 23, 2007.
Tranquility The
Tranquility node houses the USOS life support systems.
Tranquility also hosts the seven windowed
Cupola module and the
Leonardo module on its forward port. The forward facing port of
Tranquility is blocked by the station's truss structure, while the aft facing port is free for use. While the nadir port is used by the
Cupola, the zenith port is used by some exercise equipment inside the node. The starboard port is connected to node 1, and the port side is occupied by the PMA 3, previously a backup for the Shuttle docking, which will receive
International Docking Adapter-3 during CRS-18, to allow connection with the Crew Dragon and Boeing Starliner. The
Tranquility module was delivered by
STS-130 in February 2010, together with the
Cupola.
Laboratories Destiny The
Destiny laboratory is the American-built laboratory module. It is used for medical, engineering, biotechnological, physics, materials science and Earth science research.
Destiny also houses a back-up robotic work station, and was the first of the USOS laboratories to be delivered. It was delivered by
STS-98 on February 7, 2001. The
Destiny lab is managed by mission control centers in
Houston, Texas and
Huntsville, Alabama.
Columbus Columbus is a laboratory module built by the
European Space Agency. It is host to scientific research in fluids, biology, medicine, materials and Earth sciences.
Columbus also has four external payload locations, used to expose experiments to the vacuum of space. The
Columbus module was delivered to the ISS by
STS-122 on February 7, 2008. The
Columbus Control Center, located in
Germany, is responsible for the control of the
Columbus module.
Kibo The
Kibo laboratory is the Japanese component of the USOS.
Kibo has four main parts: the
Kibo lab itself, a pressurized cargo container, an exposed science platform and two robotic arms. The module is unique in that it has a small airlock, which can be used to pass payloads to the robotic arms or astronauts outside the station. The robotic arms are controlled from a work station inside the lab. The lab is used for research in medicine, engineering, biotechnology, physics, materials science and Earth science. The logistics container was the first part of
Kibo to arrive. It was delivered by
STS-123 in March 2008. The
Kibo lab itself was delivered to the ISS by the
STS-124 mission in May 2008. The exposed facility was brought to the ISS by the
STS-127 mission in July 2009. The JEM Mission Control Room in
Tsukuba, Japan is responsible for control of all elements of the
Kibo laboratory.
Other modules Quest The
Quest Joint Airlock is used to host spacewalks from the USOS segment of the ISS. It consists of two main parts: the equipment lock and the crew lock. The equipment lock is where the
Extravehicular Mobility Units are stored and preparations for spacewalks are carried out. The crew lock is depressurized during spacewalks. The
Quest airlock was delivered and installed by the
STS-104 crew in July 2001.
Leonardo The
Leonardo module, also known as the
Permanent Multipurpose Module (PMM), is a module used for stowage space on the ISS.
Leonardo is attached to the forward-facing side of the
Tranquility node. The PMM was delivered to the ISS by the
STS-133 mission in early 2011. Originally the
Multi-Purpose Logistics Module (MPLM)
Leonardo, it was converted to stay on orbit for an extended period of time prior to being installed on the ISS.
Cupola The
Cupola is a seven-windowed module attached to the
Tranquillity module. It is used for Earth observation and houses some gym equipment. All of the seven windows have covers that are closed when the windows aren't used, to protect the station from space debris impact. The
Cupola was delivered together with the
Tranquility node by
STS-130 in February 2010. PMA-2 was the main Shuttle docking port, with PMA-3 being its backup, used only a few times. With the new Crew Commercial Program and the retirement of the Shuttle fleet, NASA built the
International Docking Adapter, to convert PMA-2 and PMA-3 to the
NASA Docking System. IDA-1 was supposed to dock with PMA-2, but was lost in the
SpaceX CRS-7 launch failure. Thus IDA-2, which was brought by
SpaceX CRS-9 and was supposed to dock to PMA-3, was shifted to PMA-2. IDA-3, the replacement for the lost IDA-1, was launched in July 2019 on
SpaceX CRS-18 and was berthed to PMA-3. PMA-1 and PMA-2 were delivered with the
Unity node on STS-88 in December 1998. == External elements ==