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NEO Surveyor
Type: Space telescope mission
Domain: Planetary defense
Status: Development (launch NET September 2027)
Operator: NASA JPL
Launch Vehicle: SpaceX Falcon 9
Destination: Sun-Earth L1 point (~930,000 miles from Earth)
Mission Duration: 5-year baseline survey
Overview
NEO Surveyor is NASA's dedicated space telescope for detecting near-Earth objects (NEOs) that pose potential impact threats to Earth. The mission addresses a 20-year failure to meet Congressional detection mandates.
Mission Objectives
- Find at least two-thirds of NEOs larger than 140 meters (460 feet) in diameter within 5 years of launch
- Complete catalog coverage by ~2032
- Address the "city-killer" asteroid detection gap (140m-1km range)
Technical Specifications
- Instrument: 50cm infrared telescope
- Bands: Two heat-sensing infrared bands
- Capability: Detects both bright and dark asteroids
- Location: Sun-Earth L1 Lagrange point for optimal viewing geometry
Context
Congressional Mandate: In 2005, Congress mandated NASA to identify 90% of NEOs over 140 meters within 15 years (by 2020). As of April 2025, only 44% have been catalogued — a dramatic failure of the mandate nearly 20 years later.
Detection Gap: For extinction-level objects (>1km), ~95% are already tracked with none posing near-term threats. The critical gap is in the 140m-1km "city-killer" range where NEO Surveyor will operate.
Catalog Progress: Total NEOs identified from September 2014 to April 2025: 26,000+ out of 38,000+ total known.
Planetary Defense Pipeline
NEO Surveyor provides the detection prerequisite for the complete planetary defense response pipeline. Combined with DART's validated deflection capability (β=3.61), the system will have:
- High catalog coverage of 140m+ threats by ~2032 (detection)
- Proven deflection technique for detected rubble-pile asteroids (response)
Limitations
NEO Surveyor does not address long-period comets (LPCs) arriving from the outer solar system with only weeks to months of warning — far too short for kinetic deflection. LPCs remain an unaddressed category of planetary impact threat.
Timeline
- 2005 — Congressional mandate to identify 90% of NEOs >140m by 2020
- 2020 — Mandate deadline missed; only ~44% catalogued
- September 2027 — Planned launch (NET)
- ~2032 — Expected completion of 2/3 detection goal
Related Missions
- DART: Validated kinetic impactor deflection technique
- China kinetic impactor test: 2026 launch target for hybrid deflection/observation test
Funding Context
NASA's planetary defense budget grew from ~$4M/year in early 2000s to ~$200M/year currently, split between:
- Ground-based observations: ~$40M/year
- Flight missions: remainder
Despite budget growth, the 20-year detection gap reveals a governance failure where mandate and funding were misaligned.