NEO Surveyor
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NEO Surveyor
Summary
NEO Surveyor is a space telescope[1]. It draws 77 Wikipedia views per month (space_telescope category, ranking #24 of 124).[2]
Key Facts
- NEO Surveyor is in the country of United States[3].
- NEO Surveyor's instance of is recorded as space telescope[4].
- NEO Surveyor's instance of is recorded as infrared telescope[5].
- NEO Surveyor's instance of is recorded as proposed entity[6].
- NEO Surveyor is operated by Jet Propulsion Laboratory[7].
- NEO Surveyor is operated by University of Arizona[8].
- NEO Surveyor's manufacturer is recorded as Ball Aerospace & Technologies[9].
- NEO Surveyor's manufacturer is recorded as Space Dynamics Laboratory[10].
- NEO Surveyor's manufacturer is recorded as Teledyne Technologies[11].
- NEO Surveyor is part of Discovery Program[12].
- NEO Surveyor's Commons category is recorded as NEO Surveyor[13].
- NEO Surveyor's significant event is recorded as proposal[14].
- NEO Surveyor's significant event is recorded as rocket launch[15].
- NEO Surveyor's official website is recorded as https://neos.arizona.edu/[16].
- NEO Surveyor's official website is recorded as https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/neo-surveyor/in-depth/[17].
- NEO Surveyor's official website is recorded as https://www.ipac.caltech.edu/project/neo-surveyor[18].
- NEO Surveyor's mass is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11570', 'amount': '+1300'}[19].
- NEO Surveyor's diameter is recorded as {'unit': 'Q174728', 'amount': '+50'}[20].
- NEO Surveyor's principal investigator is recorded as Amy Mainzer[21].
Why It Matters
NEO Surveyor draws 77 Wikipedia views per month (space_telescope category, ranking #24 of 124).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]