NEAR EARTH ASTEROID TRACKING V1.0

The Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking (NEAT) project began as a collaborative effort with the United States Air Force (USAF) in December 1995. It concentrated on the discovery and observations of near-Earth asteroids and comets, collectively called near-Earth objects (NEOs). NEAT ended its observations in April 2007. Throughout its history, NEAT utilized three 1m class telescopes - two on the Hawaiian island of Maui and the 1.2m Oschin Schmidt telescope at Palomar Observatory near San Diego, CA. Three unique cameras were developed and used throughout the program. These data are intended to be usable for photometric analysis of the various objects within the NEAT data. Most nights included calibration data, and the lists of photometric standard calibration fields.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Field Value
accessLevel public
accrualPeriodicity irregular
bureauCode {026:00}
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_@id https://data.nasa.gov/data.json
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier urn:nasa:pds:context_pds3:data_set:data_set.ear-a-i1063-3-neat-v1.0
issued 2018-06-26
landingPage https://pds.nasa.gov/ds-view/pds/viewDataset.jsp?dsid=EAR-A-I1063-3-NEAT-V1.0
modified 2020-01-29
programCode {026:005}
publisher National Aeronautics and Space Administration
references {https://pds.nasa.gov}
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 55eba9b5f74729c967b460675026f6b235960f56
source_schema_version 1.1
theme {"Earth Science"}
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • asteroid
  • ckan
  • dark
  • flat-field
  • geo
  • geoss
  • national
  • north-america
  • support-archives
  • united-states
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer Thomas Morgan
maintainer_email thomas.h.morgan@nasa.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-20T23:47:40.835881
metadata_modified 2025-11-20T23:47:40.835885
notes The Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking (NEAT) project began as a collaborative effort with the United States Air Force (USAF) in December 1995. It concentrated on the discovery and observations of near-Earth asteroids and comets, collectively called near-Earth objects (NEOs). NEAT ended its observations in April 2007. Throughout its history, NEAT utilized three 1m class telescopes - two on the Hawaiian island of Maui and the 1.2m Oschin Schmidt telescope at Palomar Observatory near San Diego, CA. Three unique cameras were developed and used throughout the program. These data are intended to be usable for photometric analysis of the various objects within the NEAT data. Most nights included calibration data, and the lists of photometric standard calibration fields.
num_resources 0
num_tags 12
title NEAR EARTH ASTEROID TRACKING V1.0