HomeScienceMysterious interstellar visitor 3I/ATLAS appears to change colour for third time with sudden brightening

Mysterious interstellar visitor 3I/ATLAS appears to change colour for third time with sudden brightening

3I/ATLAS is the third-known interstellar object to enter our solar system. It was discovered on 1 July 2025 by the ATLAS telescope in Chile, travelling at over 210,000 kilometres per hour.

November 05, 2025 / 11:52 IST
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Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Shows Mysterious Blue Tint After Sudden Brightening (Image: NASA/ESA)
Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Shows Mysterious Blue Tint After Sudden Brightening (Image: NASA/ESA)

A mysterious glow has returned to the skies as interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS appears to be developing a faint blue hue after an unexpected brightening behind the Sun. The phenomenon, captured by spacecraft data, has puzzled astronomers once again.

Why is 3I/ATLAS turning blue?
According to a recent unpublished study, researchers noticed a striking blue tint in the comet’s coma after it re-emerged from behind the Sun in late October. The team suggested that gases like carbon monoxide or ammonia may be leaking from its icy surface, giving it a cooler tone. The same study revealed that the comet had brightened by several orders of magnitude while hidden from Earth, a change not fully explained by its closeness to the Sun.

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This marks the third time that scientists have observed a colour shift in 3I/ATLAS. It first glowed red in July, likely caused by dust reflecting sunlight, and later appeared green in September, possibly due to molecules such as dicarbon or cyanide. Each colour change, however, faded quickly, leaving experts uncertain about what drives these transformations.

This image, captured by astrophotographers Michael Jäger and Gerald Rhemann on 7 September, showed 3I/ATLAS emitting a greenish glow. (Image: Michael Jäger/Gerald Rhemann)