Aging Swift spacecraft gets a planned orbital assist
A Pegasus launch will deploy LINK for a months-long orbit boost of the aging Swift mission, according to Phys.org.

Space science sometimes advances by keeping old machines alive.
Phys.org reports that a Pegasus launch will deploy LINK for a months-long orbit boost of the aging Swift spacecraft. The source item does not provide the launch date, mission cost or technical profile of LINK. It does establish the operational goal: extend the usefulness of an aging spacecraft through an orbital intervention.
That is a different kind of space story from a new telescope or flagship launch. It is maintenance as science policy. Existing spacecraft carry sunk investment, mature teams and ongoing scientific value. When their orbits decay or their margins narrow, a successful assist can preserve capacity without waiting for a replacement mission.
The Swift case also reflects a broader shift in orbital operations. Spacecraft are no longer only launched, used and abandoned. They can become candidates for servicing, boosting and life-extension strategies.
If LINK performs as described in the feeder item, the headline achievement will be practical: more time for a mission that still matters.