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Cubesats are (ir-)regularly deployed at very low velocity from the ISS, and they don't usually have propulsion. This tells me that the delta-v is enough to guarantee to those in charge that their orbits won't intersect the ISS again.

A tool bag "got away" - I saw this in a text book.

I remember an ISS astronaut deploying something intentionally by hand - I think it was a nano-satellite of some kind, maybe a self-deorbit experiment?

But these are just from memory.

What kinds of things have been tossed out of - or otherwise intentionally deployed from - the ISS?

edit: I don't want a list of everything - well yes I do, but I'm not asking here for a list of everything. I'm guessing there may be 3 to 6 different classes of things. Cubesats would be one classs. Space suits would be one class, waste would be one (hypothetical) class, for example.

edit: I found this YouTube linked in this discussion of some examples: Why A Ball Thrown To Earth From Orbit "Boomerangs". Can Astronauts Hit Earth With A Ball, Arrow Or Bullet? (By inventor & programmer (and debunker) Robert Walker, October 24th 2015)

uhoh! My video link is broken, at least temporarily. It's also (of course) broken in the link above. I will ask a question shortly about this because the caption there is intriguing;

Here is a steel ball thrown out of the ISS to help test how well ground stations can track orbital debris

Video link https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=24&v=z5HcXnjtICE no longer works, so instead I've asked What radar-trackable steel ball was thrown from the ISS before October 2015?

uhoh
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3 Answers3

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An Orlan spacesuit! aka SuitSat 1.

enter image description here

The tool bag was lost by Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper during the STS-126 mission, who was a fine astronaut and deserves to be remembered for more than this incident.

https://www.universetoday.com/21411/satellite-tracker-captures-lost-toolbag-on-video/

Although I am sure the embroiderers of mission patches do not miss her:

enter image description here

An USB flashdrive

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-35487441

enter image description here (credits NASA TV)

The ISS was very young then, but Jerry Ross lost a trunnion thermal cover during STS-88. Photos of this caused some UFO nonsense but the linked article debunks it.

enter image description here

Organic Marble
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To add to the list, don't forget the large Ammonia Tank that Clay Anderson jettisoned in his EVA (23 Jul 2007):

The Living Moon Image

Source: The Living Moon

Further jettison 27th January; Glover has just tossed the Columbus Ka Band Antenna Cover over the side:

enter image description here


On 2nd June a Russian Spacewalk jettisoned the "Zarya Fluid Flow Regulator in an airtight container":

Capture from NASA TV

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According to Space.com's 02-Feb-2018 article Cosmonauts Break Russian Spacewalk Record During Space Station Antenna Repair:

The cosmonauts spent the day replacing an electronics box for a high-gain communications antenna outside the Zvezda service module. Instead of holding on to the outdated piece of equipment, the cosmonauts tossed the original electronics box overboard, dooming it to burn up in Earth's atmosphere.

caption: An old electronics box drifts through space after Russian cosmonauts tossed it away from the International Space Station during a spacewalk on Feb. 2, 2018. Credit: NASA TV

GIF:

enter image description here

edit: According to Scott Manley's video this is 1998-067NM 43203 ISS DEB

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