NASA unveils its pioneering infrared space telescope, the Near-Earth Object (NEO) Surveyor, slated for launch no earlier than September 2027. Currently in integration and testing, this next-generation observatory aims to detect potentially hazardous asteroids and cots that ground-based surveys often miss.
Mission Background
In 2005, U.S. Congress directed NASA to identify ‘city-killer’ near-Earth objects (NEOs), many of which evade detection from Earth due to their characteristics. The NEO Surveyor addresses this by scanning the solar system in infrared wavelengths, capturing the thermal glow from objects heated by the Sun rather than their reflected optical light.
Operational Details
The telescope will orbit to the Sun-Earth L1 Lagrange point, approximately 1 million miles (1.5 million kiloters) from Earth toward the Sun. This stable gravitational position enables continuous sky surveys over multiple years, providing early warnings for potential threats.
Jim Fanson, project manager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, states, “NEO Surveyor is a one-of-a-kind mission designed to solve a specific challenge: finding asteroids and cots that pose the greatest risk to Earth.” He adds that the observatory will deliver essential data to protect the planet by spotting objects invisible to ground telescopes.
Key Features
Solar panels on the Sun-facing side generate power for all systems. The infrared telescope enclosure spans 12 feet (3.7 ters), housing a cara with two detector arrays tuned to specific infrared bands. This setup produces a 16-gapixel sky mosaic, imaging the sa regions in dual bands to assess object temperatures and sizes.
A 20-foot (6-ter) sunshade on the spacecraft blocks solar glare, allowing clear views near the Sun. These capabilities position the NEO Surveyor to reveal new insights into asteroids, cots, and planetary defense.

