It’s not every year—or even every decade—that our solar system gets a visitor from the depths of interstellar space. But comet 3I/ATLAS, first spotted streaking in from beyond the Sun’s neighborhood at a blistering 58 kilometers per second (about 36 miles per second) on July 1, is a genuine cosmic time capsule: a relic possibly 10 billion years old.
Since its discovery by the ATLAS survey, scientists worldwide have turned their telescopes—on the ground, in orbit, and even from Mars—onto the icy wanderer. China’s Tianwen-1 Mars orbiter, for instance, captured sharp images showing 3I/ATLAS’s nucleus and the hazy cloud of gas and dust, or coma, that forms as a comet heats up near the Sun. There’s been plenty of public buzz too, with space enthusiasts sharing stunning photos of the comet glowing green during the recent lunar eclipse.
Surprise: Missing the Classic Comet Tail
But the story took an unexpected turn on November 5, 2025. Astronomers released two striking new images of 3I/ATLAS taken after its closest solar approach—or perihelion. Instead of the classic streaming tail we’d expect from a comet shedding volatile ices in the heat of the Sun, 3I/ATLAS appeared as a compact, bright dot. There was no obvious tail, a finding that puzzled researchers.
That’s genuinely odd. Usually, when a comet loses as much material as 3I/ATLAS has—estimates suggest its mass shrank by more than 13% during its solar flyby—you’d see a substantial coma and a tail shaped by the fury of solar wind and radiation. Instead, this interstellar visitor seems to be breaking the rules.
A Cosmic Mystery With Earthly Benefits
The mystery deepens the intrigue surrounding 3I/ATLAS. The comet, battered and transformed by billions of years of space radiation, has even reportedly changed color three times over the last few months—a behavior that’s set off all sorts of speculation (and, yes, a fair share of wild internet rumors about alien probes). Reality may be stranger: understanding objects like 3I/ATLAS could one day help scientists protect Earth from hazardous asteroids by revealing how different materials behave under the Sun’s intense glare.
For now, 3I/ATLAS continues to fascinate scientists and stargazers alike. While it might not have put on a classic cometary show, it’s opened up some big cosmic questions—and perhaps offered a glimpse into the distant history of our universe.