Sodium superoxide has been produced for infrared spectral study by condensing sodium atoms and oxygen molecules at high dilution in argon on a CsI window at 15°K. Use of oxygen isotopic mixtures and comparison with lithium superoxide verify the molecular identity and indicate a symmetrical triangular structure. Nine frequencies from three isotopic molecules determine the potential constants FO-O = 5.46 ± 0.05, FNa-O = 0.80 ± 0.02, FNa-O, Na-O = -0.12 ± 0.02 mdyn/Å. The oxygen-oxygen stretching force constant for NaO2 is near those for LiO2 and O2- which suggests that the NaO2 molecule is highly ionic and may consist of a sodium cation bonded to a superoxide anion by coulombic forces. Further reaction of NaO2 with sodium atoms produces NaO2Na which has been identified and compared to lithium peroxide.