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  • 7/7/2025
An interstellar traveler has been discovered passing through our solar system. The NASA-funded ATLAS (Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System) survey telescope in Rio Hurtado, Chile, first reported observations of comet 3I/ATLAS on July 1, 2025. Since the first report, additional observations from before the discovery were gathered from the archives of three ATLAS telescopes around the world and Caltech’s Zwicky Transient Facility at the Palomar Observatory in San Diego County, California. These “pre-discovery” observations extend back to June 14. The fast-moving comet, which originated outside our solar system around a different star, was discovered as a tiny speck moving across the vastness of space. When discovered it was about 410 million miles (670 million kilometers) away from the Sun, within the orbit of Jupiter.

This is the third interstellar object ever discovered, hence its name begins with the number 3 and the letter I. Scientists will have several months to observe and study the comet as it passes through our solar system and before it exits. As of July 3, 2025, the comet is just inside the orbit of Jupiter and in late October 2025 it will make its closest approach to our sun from just inside the orbit of Mars. It poses no threat to Earth but offers a fascinating and rare opportunity for scientists to study these interstellar interlopers.

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00:00This object has just been discovered.
00:033i Atlas was discovered on July 1st by the NASA-funded Atlas Survey.
00:08It was discovered using their telescope at Rio Hurtado in Chile,
00:12and it was first detected as a speck of light moving relative to background stars.
00:16We collected a good amount of data, more than 100 observations.
00:20We know its trajectory fairly well.
00:22We know it came from outside the solar system.
00:24Right now it's inside the orbit of Jupiter,
00:27and is headed for its closest pass to the Sun at the end of October.
00:30That's going to be barely inside the orbit of Mars,
00:33and then it's going to keep going on its way out of the solar system.
00:36From images, we also saw that this object is active,
00:39which means that around the nucleus there is some coma,
00:42which is an indication that this object is, in fact, a comet.
00:45Right now it's hard to say how big this object is,
00:48because being active, the brightness that we see
00:50is partially due to the size of the object,
00:53but also is partially due to the activity,
00:56so we cannot really pinpoint the nucleus size directly.
00:59We have to better understand how active this object is,
01:02and then we can refine the size estimate and get a good idea.
01:06It's moving at a velocity of about 135,000 miles per hour,
01:10so it's going really fast.
01:12For that distance from the Sun, this is really exceptional.
01:15You have to be an interstellar object to be going that fast
01:17at that distance from the Sun.
01:19This object comes nowhere close to the Earth.
01:21It's going to make a pass close-ish to Mars at about 30 million kilometers,
01:25or roughly 20 million miles from the red planet,
01:28but nowhere close to the Earth.
01:29It's not going to make a close approach,
01:31major close approach to any of the planets,
01:33so no risk from this object, just a scientific opportunity.
01:36The more data we get, the better we can measure the position of this object
01:40as it travels through the solar system and it moves out of it,
01:44but we also want to collect physical characterization data.
01:46For instance, we would like to understand better
01:48what the size of this object could be, the composition,
01:51the levels of activity.
01:52We're just bracing ourselves to get as much information as possible.
01:55We're really excited about these objects.
01:57So far, we've discovered three interstellar objects.
01:59The first one was Oumuamua in 2017,
02:01the second one Borisov in 2019,
02:04and now we have the third one, 3I Atlas.
02:06So it's a rare opportunity, and as a scientific community,
02:10we want to collect as many data as possible to characterize this object
02:14and learn as much as we can.

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