Swift thinking buys NASA observatory a little more time before re-entry
Jump to main content
REG AD
Science
Swift thinking buys NASA observatory a little more time before re-entry Rescue mission might have until the end of summer after science operations halted
Richard Speed Richard Speed
Published wed 27 May 2026 // 16:07 UTC
NASA's decision to halt most science operations on its Swift observatory has paid off. Estimates now put the spacecraft's descent past the point of no return to the end of summer rather than the start.The space agency presented the latest set of re-entry forecasts for the spacecraft, which now point to a descent below the critical altitude of 300 km (185 miles) in September rather than July. The figure is important, since the higher the spacecraft is, the better the chances of a successful rescue mission.Scientists continually update forecasts for the orbital decay of spacecraft. Once a mission is within two years of re-entry, those forecasts are updated more frequently. In November 2023, forecasts suggested Swift was entering that two-year window. Others estimated it would remain in orbit well into the 2030s.
REG AD
However, the outlook changed in 2024 as the Sun reached its solar maximum phase and Earth's atmosphere expanded slightly, increasing drag on Swift. By 2025, the picture was less rosy, with most forecasts estimating the observatory would re-enter by summer 2026. NASA put out a call to industry for a solution, eventually awarding the contract to Katalyst.
REG AD
The forecasts eventually became weekly and were key to deciding when to halt most science operations aboard the spacecraft. They will be equally critical in predicting where Swift will be when the reboost mission is launched.Michael Shoemaker, deputy flight dynamics lead in Space Science Missions Operations at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, said: "These predictions evolve, based on space weather forecasts and other factors like Swift's current height and orientation."It's also an iterative process with members of Swift's operations team. They determine new ways to point the spacecraft to reduce drag, and we do some new computations to see how much extra time that buys them." MORE CONTEXT NASA's bid to save Swift from fiery death passes another hurdle
NASA pauses most Swift science ops to buy time for reboost mission
Pegasus XL rocket dusted off to rescue NASA’s Swift observatory from fiery demise
NASA mulls sending a rescue rocket to boost Swift observatory's orbit
Normally, Swift would slow to view targets such as gamma-ray bursts, but earlier this year, the team decided to put the spacecraft in an orientation to minimize atmospheric drag.The hope was that, by doing so, the team would eke out a little more time for the rescue mission, which is currently due for launch in June or July. The decision appears to have paid off. NASA wrote: "According to the most recent predictions, the Swift team's actions will likely keep the spacecraft above the critical altitude into early fall." That's plenty of time for the reboost mission, which, if successful, could add years to the spacecraft's operational lifetime. ®
science nasa katalyst re-entry swift observatory orbital decay
REG AD
public sector
ICE to keep an eye on your eyes under $25M biometric scanner deal
And you thought a face recognition app was intrusive?
Security
No fix yet for critical RCE bug in open-source Git service Gogs - exploit module is out
Researcher reported the vuln in March. Maintainers haven't responded to his messages since
PARTNER CONTENT
AI and data sovereignty in Postgres: An answer to the datacenter energy crisis
A billion AI agents walk into a power grid
Legal
23andMe inherits lawsuit over 'disturbing' DNA data breach
California AG claims genetics biz downplayed 2023 mega-leak while paying ransom to attacker
Systems
EU's digital sovereignty boo-boo may be the best thing to ever happen to the project
DIY or die. Just don't let the CIA buy it
software
UCLA seeks pre-litigation resolution with Oracle
Discussion understood to concern delayed SaaS transformation project
MOST POPULAR
AI + ML Google has seriously leaned into AI enshittification lately Security Anthropic to release Mythos-class models to the public Security Disgruntled 0-day hunter 'humiliated' by Microsoft pledges 'bone shattering drop' as Redmond calls cops Operating Systems Linus Torvalds to ‘start being more hardnosed’ about ‘pointless pull requests’ – some of which come from AIs