More Than a Dozen NASA Spacecraft Have Laid Eyes on Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS. Now, You Can View New Images That They Captured
More than a dozen spacecraft, including NASA and ESA missions, captured images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS, with ESA Mars data improving its orbital path by 10 times.
5 Articles
5 Articles
NASA Releases Fresh Pics of Weirdo Comet 3I/ATLAS Taken From Multiple Planets
We live in a wondrous age. The notoriously weird comet 3I/ATLAS, which has captured people’s imagination as some astrophysicists out there think it might be mysterious alien tech, while others think it’s just the comet that does weird stuff, has been photographed by NASA from not just one planet, but two—Earth and Mars. The weirdo space object that’s older than the solar system it’s passing through was photographed by NASA’s Perseverance rover a…
Interstellar comet 31/ATLAS: NASA unveils brand-new images from 15 spacecraft in unprecedented cosmic campaign
NASA has released brand-new images of Interstellar comet 31/ATLAS, offering the most detailed and varied look yet at the mysterious interstellar visitor. The agency confirmed on Wednesday (Nov. 19) that 15 spacecraft, including the James Webb Space Telescope, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Lucy, Psyche, Perseverance, and many others, have captured images and scientific data as the
NASA Just Dropped Images of Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS—Captured From Mars, Deep Space, and Even the Sun's Edge
In a scientific first, NASA has assembled a full-spectrum view of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS—a relic from beyond our solar system—by orchestrating a rare multi-mission campaign that spans from Mars to the fringes of deep space. The space agency revealed that eight spacecraft successfully tracked the comet across a variety of instruments, capturing it in wavelengths ranging from ultraviolet to visible light. The result: an unprecedented composit…
NASA mobilizes twelve missions to follow and analyze the 3I/ATLAS interstellar comet, a cosmic visitor who promises to revolutionize understanding of materials and trajectories outside our solar system.
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