NASA is gearing up for an urgent orbital boost for its Swift space telescope. The plan costs about $30 million and will launch a booster to lift Swift’s orbit so it does not fall back to Earth. The launch is primed for next quarter, and NASA and its partner agencies are running last checks for the rocket. Swift, a veteran observatory, watches for gamma‑ray bursts . After years in space it has slipped into a lower orbit. The boost will give the probe a little bit of more time of work, letting it keep gathering high‑energy data . Mission control in Houston will watch the maneuver and confirm it works smoothly .
Latest News About NASA's $30M Swift Telescope Rescue Plan NASA Preps $30M Swift Telescope Rescue NASA Pushes Forward With $30M Rescue of Swift Orbit Swift's $30M Lifeline Launches in June $30M Boost to Save Swift Telescope Why NASA is Spending $30M to Rescue Swift
Sources & References
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NASA rushes to save Swift telescope from falling back to Earth with $30 million rescue mission - New York Post
NASA rushes to save Swift telescope from falling back to Earth with $30 million rescue mission New York Post
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NASA launches rescue mission to stop telescope from falling back to Earth - Washington Examiner
NASA launches rescue mission to stop telescope from falling back to Earth Washington Examiner
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NASA Acts to Rescue Orbiting Observatory from Critical Orbital Decay - Qatar news agency
NASA Acts to Rescue Orbiting Observatory from Critical Orbital Decay Qatar news agency
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NASA races to save Swift telescope from falling back to Earth with daring rescue mission - couriernews.com
NASA races to save Swift telescope from falling back to Earth with daring rescue mission couriernews.com
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NASA moves to save ageing telescope - Ahmedabad Mirror
NASA moves to save ageing telescope Ahmedabad Mirror