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A spaceship set off to rescue a telescope falling towards Earth .
FI🏛️ Politics18 hr. ago

A spaceship set off to rescue a telescope falling towards Earth .

A robotic spacecraft named LINK was launched on an unusual rescue mission to save NASA's Swift telescope from falling back to Earth. The Swift telescope, launched in 2004, has descended to a dangerously low orbit due to recent solar storms, dropping from 600 kilometers to approximately 360 kilometers above Earth. Without intervention, the telescope is expected to disintegrate in October. The LINK spacecraft, roughly the size of a refrigerator, aims to grasp the telescope using three robotic arms and gradually return it to a safer orbit over the next few months. NASA has paid $30 million to Katalyst Space Technologies, the company that built LINK, for this rescue operation. The Swift telescope is scientifically significant as it studies gamma-ray bursts, among the most powerful explosions in the universe.

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Yle Uutiset logoYle UutisetState / PublicCenterFactual 95Objective 8518 hr. ago
A spaceship set off to rescue a telescope falling towards Earth .

A robotic spacecraft named LINK was launched on an unusual rescue mission to save NASA's Swift telescope from falling back to Earth. The Swift telescope, launched in 2004, has descended to a dangerously low orbit due to recent solar storms, dropping from 600 kilometers to approximately 360 kilometers above Earth. Without intervention, the telescope is expected to disintegrate in October. The LINK spacecraft, roughly the size of a refrigerator, aims to grasp the telescope using three robotic arms and gradually return it to a safer orbit over the next few months. NASA has paid $30 million to Katalyst Space Technologies, the company that built LINK, for this rescue operation. The Swift telescope is scientifically significant as it studies gamma-ray bursts, among the most powerful explosions in the universe.

Bias read (Center): The article provides a factual account of a space mission involving a private company and NASA, focusing on technical details and scientific significance. There is no evident ideological framing, biased language, or emphasis on political implications.

Why these scores (Factual 95 · Objective 85): Factually accurate, aligns with the BBC source on the Swift observatory's situation and the rescue mission. Objectivity is slightly lower due to more emotionally charged language like 'vaarassa syöksyä takaisin Maahan' and 'tieteellisesti erityinen', which adds emphasis beyond neutral reporting.

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