Particle.news
Download on the App Store

3I/ATLAS Reaches Perihelion as Global Fleet Trains Instruments on Third Interstellar Visitor

Agencies describe the object as no threat, with a coordinated observation campaign running through late January.

Overview

  • The interstellar object reached perihelion on October 29 at roughly 1.4 AU from the Sun, marking the peak of activity for spectroscopy and imaging.
  • Space observatories including Hubble, the James Webb Space Telescope and TESS, along with several planetary spacecraft, are collecting data while the object remains behind the Sun from Earth’s view.
  • Ground-based visibility is expected to resume in early December, with the closest Earth approach projected for December 19 at about 270 million kilometers.
  • The International Asteroid Warning Network has scheduled a focused observation exercise from November 27 to January 27 to refine astrometry and probe composition.
  • Reports of unusual features such as an early anti-tail and atypical CO2 and nickel signatures remain under study, and NASA and ESA say there is no evidence of an artificial origin or any impact risk.