Near-Earth Object (NEO) Surveyor, a NASA planetary defense space mission, is currently in Phase B with a launch date in 2026. NEO Surveyor is an infrared telescope designed to detect and characterize Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs). The required sensors leverage the space flight heritage and further development over the last 15 years of HgCdTe arrays to detect infrared light spanning from 4 to 10 μm. NEO Surveyor will employ eight passively cooled HgCdTe Sensor Chip Assemblies (SCAs) across two bands, each band consisting of a 1x4 SCA mosaic to cover a wide field of view. Four of these SCAs have a >5.5 μm cutoff wavelength and cover the shorter 4-5.2 μm (NC1) band, while four SCAs will have a >10.5 μm cutoff wavelength and span the longer 6-10 μm (NC2) band. We present calibration and performance results from two recently produced pathfinder SCAs, one for each band, manufactured by Teledyne Imaging Sensors with development guidance from the University of Arizona, the University of Rochester, and JPL. Both devices demonstrate the requisite low dark current, high well depth, and high quantum efficiency, exceeding mission requirements.
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