| nonprofit_name = [[Nonprofit_Name::Near Earth Asteroid Reconnaissance Project
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| nonprofit_name = [[Nonprofit_Name::Near Earth Asteroid Reconnaissance Project]]
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| nonprofit_logo = [[Image:Impact event.jpg|thumb|350px|><small>''The impact of a kilometer-sized asteroid with the earth, shown here in an artist’s conception, could release an amount of energy equivalent to a million nuclear warheads, leading to the extinction of most large lifeforms on earth.</small>
+
| nonprofit_logo = [[Image:Impact event.jpg|thumb|350px|><small>''The impact of a kilometer-sized asteroid with the earth, shown here in an artist’s conception, could release an amount of energy equivalent to a million nuclear warheads, leading to the extinction of most large lifeforms on earth.</small>]]
| nonprofit_slogan =
| nonprofit_slogan =
| company_type = [[Company_Type::NPO|Non-Profit Research Organization]]
| company_type = [[Company_Type::NPO|Non-Profit Research Organization]]
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===Membership===
===Membership===
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Any amateur or professional astronomer or team of such with access to a suitably equipped telescope system can join the N.E.A.R. network. Many are active in the Night Sky Network of National Aeronautics and Space Administration|NASA.<ref> http://nightsky.jpl.nasa.gov/</ref> Nearly all members utilize charge-coupled device|charge-coupled detectors (CCD), typically with dimensions of 2096 x 2096 pixels, rather than photographic images to search for asteroids. After becoming a member of the volunteer network of observers, the astronomer notifies N.E.A.R. by e-mail of the position of a candidate object.
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Any amateur or professional astronomer or team of such with access to a suitably equipped telescope system can join the N.E.A.R. network. Many are active in the Night Sky Network of National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).<ref> http://nightsky.jpl.nasa.gov/</ref> Nearly all members utilize charge-coupled device|charge-coupled detectors (CCD), typically with dimensions of 2096 x 2096 pixels, rather than photographic images to search for asteroids. After becoming a member of the volunteer network of observers, the astronomer notifies N.E.A.R. by e-mail of the position of a candidate object.