Names | Near-Earth Object Surveillance Mission Near-Earth Object Camera NEOCam |
---|---|
Mission type | Asteroid impact avoidance, astronomy |
Operator | NASA / JPL |
Website | https://neos.arizona.edu/ |
Mission duration | 12 years (planned)[1] |
Spacecraft properties | |
Manufacturer | Jet Propulsion Laboratory[1] |
Launch mass | 1,300 kg (2,900 lb)[1] |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | September 2027 (planned)[2] |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Heliocentric orbit |
Regime | Sun–Earth L1 |
Main telescope | |
Diameter | 50 cm (20 in) |
Wavelengths | Infrared (4–5.2 and 6–10 μm) |
NEO Surveyor, formerly called Near-Earth Object Camera (NEOCam), then NEO Surveillance Mission, is a planned space-based infrared telescope designed to survey the Solar System for potentially hazardous asteroids.[3]
The NEO Surveyor spacecraft will survey from the Sun–Earth L1 (inner) Lagrange point, allowing it to see objects inside Earth's orbit, and its mid-infrared detectors sensitive to thermal emission will detect asteroids independently of their reflected sunlight.[4][5][6] The NEO Surveyor mission will be a successor to the NEOWISE mission, and the two missions have the same principal investigator, Amy Mainzer at the University of Arizona.[7][8]
Since first proposed in 2006, the concept repeatedly competed unsuccessfully for NASA funding against science missions unrelated to planetary defense, despite an unfunded 2005 US Congressional directive to NASA.[1][7] In 2019, the Planetary Defense Coordination Office decided to fund this mission outside NASA's science budget due to its national security implications.[9][10] On 11 June 2021, NASA authorized the NEO Surveyor mission to proceed to the preliminary design phase.[11] The Jet Propulsion Laboratory will lead development of the mission.[1]
As of December 2022, NEO Surveyor is expected to be launched no later than June 2028.[12] As of October 2023 the launch is planned for September 2027.[2]
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