The Swift house mission was launched in 2004 with a aim to detect high-energy Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs). Since then, this US, UK and Italian venture has detected round 100 bursts yearly, lots of that are within the very distant universe. They’re considered as a result of merging neutron stars or very huge stars exploding to change into a neutron star or black gap.
Armagh astronomer Professor Gavin Ramsay was at College School London’s Mullard House Science Laboratory on the time of launch and effectively remembers the joy (and stress!) of seeing the launch from a distant video hyperlink. The primary profitable detection was the fruits of a few years’ work from many a whole lot of scientists, engineers and software program specialists. The GOTO all-sky survey, of which Armagh is a founding associate, has detected the optical counterpart of many GRBs found by Swift.
It’s fairly outstanding that Swift remains to be orbiting the Earth greater than 20 years after launch. Nonetheless, since Swift was launched right into a low Earth orbit, atmospheric drag has brought about the satellite tv for pc’s orbit to shrink, with the satellite tv for pc predicted to re-enter the Earth’s environment later this 12 months.
Nonetheless, final 12 months, NASA got here up with a crafty plan to save lots of Swift from burning up and ending the mission. NASA labored intently with Katalyst House to arrange to ship a smaller satellite tv for pc to Swift after which present a lift to shift the satellite tv for pc to the next orbit, which might enable many extra years of discovering GRBs. That is the primary time that such a boosting mission could have been launched.
The launch is predicted to happen on June twenty seventh when a Lockheed Tristar aircraft will take a Pegasus rocket to excessive altitude, the place it will likely be despatched to fulfill the Swift spacecraft.
See right here for particulars of easy methods to view the launch:

Northrop Grumman’s Stargazer took off Thursday, June 18, 2026, from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. The modified L-1011 plane carried the corporate’s Pegasus XL rocket internet hosting LINK, a robotic servicing spacecraft from Katalyst House. LINK will launch from the air-deployed Pegasus XL later this month on a mission to spice up the orbit of NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory.
NASA/Jeanette Kazmierczak









