NASA launches robotic mission to save Ksh.32B space telescope
This handout photo released by NASA on July 31, 2004, shows the Swift spacecraft being unwrapped in Hangar AE at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at Kennedy Space Center, Florida. Photo by HANDOUT / NASA / AFP
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NASA launched a robotic mission on Friday to try to prevent
one of its ageing telescopes from burning up in the atmosphere, a complicated
operation expected to last several months.
The unprecedented $30 million effort involves sending a
robot to rescue the Swift space telescope that's currently falling towards Earth.
If successful, the mission could pave the way for giving
other satellites a second life.
Initially scheduled for Tuesday, the robot's launch was
postponed due to weather and then technical issues. It finally took place on
Friday at 0836 GMT from an atoll in the Pacific Ocean.
Developed by American startup Katalyst, the spacecraft was
launched by a small rocket named Pegasus, itself launched from an aeroplane.
Once it reaches an orbit close to that of Swift, the robot
will deploy its solar panels and perform a series of checks.
It will then have to locate the Swift telescope in the
vastness of space, circle around it and dock with it using three robotic arms —
manoeuvres expected to take several weeks.
Finally, it will attempt to propel the satellite
approximately 300 kilometres higher above the Earth, roughly to its initial
orbital position. That operation is expected to last at least a month.
The Swift telescope cost $250 million and is used to study
gamma-ray bursts, the most powerful explosions in the universe.
"This is a lot of firsts stacked on top of each
other," Shawn Domagal-Goldman, director of NASA's astrophysics division,
told reporters Tuesday.
"I'm just deeply thankful that we're even giving this a
go."

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