:STATS :INFO A telescope worth saving The Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory has spent 21 years hunting the most violent explosions in the universe: gamma-ray bursts. These events last seconds to minutes and never repeat in the same spot. Swift detects them, locates them, and alerts every other telescope on Earth within 60 seconds, a feat no other spacecraft can match. It still has years of science ahead of it. The problem is gravity. Unusually high solar activity since 2022 has puffed up Earth's upper atmosphere, increasing the drag on Swift's orbit. Without a boost, it will fall below a safe threshold this month and burn up by October. :IMAGE.half | :INFO.half Built to last, not to be serviced Swift was designed to operate autonomously, not to be grabbed and towed. Katalyst had nine months and $30 million to build a spacecraft that could do exactly that. :GALLERY [displaystyle:travel] :MOMENT The Delta II lifts Swift into orbit. November 20, 2004. Cape Canaveral, Florida :QUOTE [quotetype:plain, subtitle:NASA mission scientist] All of this is challenging and risky. Swift was never meant to be serviced. We are asking a robot to do something no robot has ever done to a spacecraft that was not designed to receive it. :NOTE LINK is equipped with three robot arms fitted with hand-like grippers, five sensor systems, and three ion thrusters. It launched July 3 from the Marshall Islands on a Pegasus XL rocket and is now in orbit approaching Swift. :NOTE Timeline: rendezvous expected by late July, orbital boost complete by September, science operations resume by October if all goes well. Swift would be back scanning for gamma-ray bursts before the end of 2026. :NOTE If LINK succeeds, it will be the first time a commercial robotic spacecraft has captured and boosted an uncrewed NASA satellite that was not designed to be serviced. A new era for satellite life extension. :LINK https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/neil-gehrels-swift-observatory/ Swift Observatory on NASA.gov