Katalyst launches Link satellite to rescue NASA Swift

Katalyst Space Technologies has launched its Link spacecraft on a mission to rendezvous with and rescue NASA's aging Swift observatory. The air-launched rocket lifted off from the Pacific Ocean on Independence Day weekend.

The nearly half-ton Link satellite deployed successfully into orbit after an air-launched Pegasus XL rocket released it at 4:36 am EDT on Friday. Ground teams confirmed communications with the spacecraft shortly after the nearly 13-minute ascent.

The mission aims to boost Swift's altitude before it falls too low in October. Katalyst won a NASA contract last September to build and launch the first-of-its-kind rescue effort in under a year.

Over the coming weeks, Link will perform checkout procedures and approach the 21-year-old observatory. Robotic arms will capture Swift, and plasma thrusters will raise its orbit over several months.

"This is a historic mission," said Robert Lamontagne, vice president of strategic partnerships at Katalyst. "It's doing an operational, real-world objective."

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Illustration of SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launching South Korea's CAS500-2 satellite from Vandenberg Space Force Base.
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South Korean earth-observation satellite CAS500-2 successfully launched from US

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South Korea's Compact Advanced Satellite (CAS) 500-2 successfully launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. The satellite entered low-Earth orbit and made first contact with a ground station in Norway. The Korea AeroSpace Administration (KASA) confirmed it is operating normally.

NASA has contracted a startup to launch a robotic spacecraft that will grab the aging Swift observatory and raise its orbit before it falls too low. The Link servicing satellite is set to fly on the final Pegasus rocket later this month.

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A small satellite designed to extend the life of NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory lifted off on 3 July. The mission aims to raise the aging space telescope back to its original orbit after years of atmospheric drag.

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