I watched scientists track interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS leaving the solar system in real-time: 'This is some prime-time science'

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I watched scientists track interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS leaving the solar system in real-time: 'This is some prime-time science'
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Kenna Hughes-Castleberry is the Content Manager at Space.com. Formerly, she was the Science Communicator at JILA, a physics research institute. Kenna is also a freelance science journalist. Her beats include quantum technology, AI, animal intelligence, corvids, and cephalopods.

NASA reveals new images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS from across the solar system: 'It looks and behaves like a comet'Scientists capture interstellar invader comet 3I/ATLAS growing a tail: 'This image is both a scientific milestone and a source of wonder' Comets Interstellar visitors like comet 3I/ATLAS are the most common objects in the Milky Way: 'There's almost always one within the solar system'Watch interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS speed away from the sun in free telescope livestream tonightIt was 4 a.

m. on Nov. 25 at the top of Hawaii's dormant Maunakea volcano. The process to view the comet took less time than expected.was a small, fuzzy blob drifting through a crowded field of stars. On another, its light had been stretched into a barcode of rainbow lines, some brighter than others, each corresponding to a different gas boiling off the object's nucleus.NASA reveals new images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS from across the solar system: 'It looks and behaves like a comet' Scientists capture interstellar invader comet 3I/ATLAS growing a tail: 'This image is both a scientific milestone and a source of wonder' What we were really watching on the control room's screen, though, wasn't just a comet. It was a time capsule: a chunk of ice and rock that may be older than the sun, now on its out of ourafter accidentally passing by on its cosmic voyage through the universe. It even managed to get a close pass by our star, the sparkling orb it has spent most of its existence watching from afar.Back in August, while the comet was still diving toward the sun, Chile's Gemini South telescope, the other half of the international observatory,as its tail"switched on" and began to grow. Those data showed a distinctly comet-like object with a bright coma and jets of gas dominated by carbon dioxide and cyanogenBy late October, 3I/ATLAS had whipped through perihelion, or its closest spot to our solar system's sun, at about 130,000 miles per hour , then disappeared behind the sun from Earth's point of view. This journey was captured by many telescopes and spacecraft, from theBreaking space news, the latest updates on rocket launches, skywatching events and more!Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors But now, in November, I watched from my laptop as 3I/ATLAS climbed into northern skies as Hawaii's Gemini North Telescope took over. "This is our first observation from Gemini since it reappeared behind the sun," explained scientist Brian Lemaux."We're under active observations right now, which is what Shadow the Scientists is all about. this is not a show. We're actually trying to analyze and understand the data. The comet is very dynamic," he added. In other words, its brightness and spectral features had changed since the Gemini South run. NASA reveals new images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS from across the solar system: 'It looks and behaves like a comet' Scientists capture interstellar invader comet 3I/ATLAS growing a tail: 'This image is both a scientific milestone and a source of wonder' On screen, Lemaux showed a spectrum: bright, vertical lines corresponding to known elements used to nail down the wavelength scale to see the interstellar comet more accurately."All these vertical lines are different chemical species of known origin that we can use to calibrate the observation," he said. They followed that with flat fields — uniformly illuminated frames to correct for imperfections in the instrument — and a carefully chosen"solar analog" star. Because the comet mostly reflects sunlight, they needed to divide that sunlight out to isolate the comet's own emissions. "The telescope optics are imperfect. The atmosphere is a problem from the ground. Our instruments, despite being very awesome, are not perfect either," Lemaux said."We want to not care about any of that. We want to get to the intrinsic nature of any source that we observe." Only once those pieces were in place did they move to the main act: a long-slit spectrum across the coma, followed by an integral field unit observation — essentially a tiny 3D data cube giving a spectrum at every point in a small image of the comet.of the coma after closest approach could show up in its chemistry and shape.How old is 3I/ATLAS? During a lull between exposures, someone in the webinar chat asked a deceptively simple question: How long does it take this comet to go around the galaxy? "The galactic orbital period of 3I/ATLAS is about 250 million years," Bolin replied. "It's probably not its first rodeo," he added. In extragalactic astronomy, he joked, 100 million years is considered"instantaneous" by experts.Two groups of researchers tackled the problem by treating 3I/ATLAS the way we treat stars: comparing its velocity to the known relationship between age and random motion in the galaxy.scientists Aster Taylor of the University of Michigan and Darryl Seligman of Michigan State University calculated a"kinematic age" from 3I/ATLAS's excess speed of about 36 miles per second relative to the sun. Their result: the interstellar comet is likely 3 billion to 11 billion years old, assuming interstellar objects and stars follow the same age–velocity relation.by scientist Matthew Hopkins at the University of Oxford and colleagues, used a model that focused on the Milky Way's thick disk, a population of older, dynamically"hotter" stars, to infer a likely age of the interstellar comet at between about 7.6 billion and 14 billion years.In our seminar, Bolin later showed a visualization of 3I/ATLAS's orbit around the galaxy — no neat ellipse, but rather a looping, spiraling path distorted by encounters with gas clouds, spiral arms and dark matter.An asteroid around the sun has a closed elliptical orbit; an interstellar comet in the Milky Way doesn't. The galaxy's"very inhomogeneous clumps of matter," as Bolin described, constantly tug on the interstellar comet, making it nearly impossible to back-trace 3I/ATLAS to a specific parent star.As the Hawaiian sky crept toward dawn, the spectral work wound down. The Gemini North team cycled through four filters to look at the interstellar comet. The comet brightened and faded slightly from image to image as different parts of its spectrum came into view. "These images are not just pretty," Bolin emphasized. They're being used to pin down 3I/ATLAS's exact position on the sky with exquisite precision. When the last images came in, Shadow the Scientists staffer Jameeka Marshall reminded the audience that all the data would be public immediately:"There's zero 'proprietary time' associated with the data … anybody that's interested can take these data, reduce the data and make them in a scientifically viable form using the tools that we have here at the Gemini Observatory." Outside the control room, sunrise threatened the image quality. Inside, the comet on the screen looked unchanged: a fuzzy blot of light with a tail barely hinted at against the brightening sky. Hidden in those frames and spectra is the biography of a traveler that has been aging in interstellar space since long before Earth formed; a relic from an early, metal-poor corner of the galaxy, briefly caught in our telescopes on its way past. For a few hours on Maunakea — and for a few months in 2025 through 2026 as observatories worldwide tracked it — comet 3I/ATLAS has given us something astonishingly rare: a direct look at the debris of someone else's planetary system, eroded by billions of years.Kenna Hughes-Castleberry is the Content Manager at Space.com. Formerly, she was the Science Communicator at JILA, a physics research institute. Kenna is also a freelance science journalist. Her beats include quantum technology, AI, animal intelligence, corvids, and cephalopods.NASA reveals new images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS from across the solar system: 'It looks and behaves like a comet' Scientists capture interstellar invader comet 3I/ATLAS growing a tail: 'This image is both a scientific milestone and a source of wonder' NASA reveals new images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS from across the solar system: 'It looks and behaves like a comet' Looking for a last-minute bargain? These Cyber Monday streaming, Lego and drone deals are must-haves, but time's running out, so you'll have to hurry Looking for a last-minute bargain? These Cyber Monday streaming, Lego and drone deals are must-haves, but time's running out, so you'll have to hurry

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