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NASA to Launch Robotic Mission to Save Falling Telescope Tuesday

NASA hired Katalyst Space Technologies to use a $30 million robotic spacecraft to catch Swift and raise its orbit before reentry.

  • NASA hired startup Katalyst Space Technologies for a $30 million rescue mission to save the aging Swift Observatory, with the robotic spacecraft launching as early as Tuesday from the Marshall Islands.
  • Swift has been losing altitude due to intense solar activity since its 2004 launch and must remain above 185 miles to function; estimates suggest it could reach a point of no return by October.
  • Katalyst's autonomous spacecraft, named Lift, features a 40-foot solar wingspan and three arms with pinching grippers, requiring one month to rendezvous with Swift and two months to raise its orbit to 373 miles.
  • Katalyst Space CEO Ghonhee Lee called the mission "a new play in the playbook," marking the first time an American space robot has attempted such a recovery and establishing a new repair industry.
  • Successful operation could enable future missions, as thirty-six-year-old Hubble also faces altitude loss and could receive a life-extending boost from Katalyst as early as 2028.
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The Swift telescope, launched in 2004, is losing altitude. To save it, a robotic spacecraft must reach it before October.

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Astronomy.com broke the news in United States on Thursday, June 25, 2026.
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