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Nasa launches mission to save falling space telescope
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Pallab GhoshScience Correspondent
NASA
Artist's impression of the Swift observatory which was built to study the cosmos
A Nasa-funded spacecraft has been sent into space to catch a falling telescope.
The Swift observatory detects some of the most powerful explosions in the Universe - but is at risk of crashing back to Earth in the coming months.
The small space telescope will be intercepted by the LINK craft, which will attempt to grab it with three robotic arms, and try and lift it back to a safe orbit.
The rescue mission, launched on Friday, has never been attempted before, and Dr Simeon Barber, a space scientist, has said it is "high risk".
"But Nasa obviously thinks it's worth a go. And the science community is hopeful about this because it's an important telescope that enables us to study super high-energy phenomena that we have no other means to study," said Barber, a senior research fellow at the Open University.
The Swift observatory is falling because increased solar activity has pushed out the Earth's atmosphere such that it touches Swift. This drags on the observatory and slows it down as it orbits the Earth, lowering its altitude.
When it was first launched it sat in an orbit at 373 miles (600 km) and has now lowered to around 220 miles (360 km), with most of that descent in the past two years.
Satellites fall to Earth and burn up on re-entry all the time. But Swift is scientifically special, beloved by the researchers who use it to peer into the very dawn of the cosmos.
The observatory, which is the size of a large car, was launched in 2004, with three telescopes aboard, to study the most powerful explosions in the Universe.
These are caused by the final, violent deaths of giant stars and by the collisions of the embers they leave behind.
They release in just a few seconds the same energy as the Sun will give out over its entire 10-billion-year lifetime. And because these precious cataclysmic moments are so brief the spacecraft has to be quick and nimble – hence its name.
In short, there is nothing like Swift, and Nasa deemed that it was a spacecraft worth saving.
NASA/Swift/A. Beardmore (University of Leicester)
In 2022, Swift captured this image of a gamma-ray burst from a massive star dying two billion light-years from Earth.
The engineers of a young company, Katalyst Space Technologies, from Flagstaff, Arizona, were given the task of saving the observatory.
They had less than a year to launch their mission before Swift fell below the altitude of 186 miles (300 km) where a rescue becomes impossible, according to the firm's Chief Executive Ghonhee Lee.
"What the Katalyst team has accomplished in just eight months is extraordinary. The team designed, built, tested, and integrated a robotic spacecraft capable of performing one of the most ambitious commercial servicing missions ever attempted," he said in a news release issued earlier this month.
NASA/Scott Wiessinger
Engineers from Katalyst Space Technologies built their rescue robot in record time.
The LINK spacecraft, which Lee's team came up with, is a three-armed robot, about the size of a fridge, bristling with cameras and guidance systems and driven by small thrusters.
Launched on Friday, the spacecraft will spend the next few weeks waking up its systems one-by-one: power, navigation, the cameras and sensors it will rely on, and check that each one survived the ride.
Although the Pegasus XL rocket on which it rode has flung LINK close to Swift's orbit, there is still much work for the three-armed robot to do to get close to Swift - the observatory's altitude is shifting week-by-week.
The rescue spacecraft, itself moving, has to home in on a moving target. But about three to four weeks after launch it should finally draw...