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Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS baffles scientists after passing the Sun

A mysterious visitor from beyond the Solar System has emerged from its solar flyby without the cometary tail astronomers expected to see. The absence of debris has reopened debate about what this object truly is and why it is behaving so strangely.

November 11, 2025 / 12:10 IST
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Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS baffles scientists after passing the Sun

The interstellar object known as 3I/ATLAS has once again puzzled astronomers after new images taken on November 5 showed no sign of a cometary tail. The observations, captured by the R. Naves Observatory in Spain, contradict what scientists expected to see after the object passed close to the Sun last week, according to a report in the New York Post.

Typically, a comet that swings near the Sun sheds gas and dust that form a bright, sweeping tail. According to Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb, the encounter should have stripped away a significant portion of the object’s nucleus. Loeb estimated that roughly 13 percent of its mass should have been visible as debris trailing behind the core as it reappeared in Earth’s view.

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Instead, the latest image shows a compact, featureless glow with no visible tail. Loeb said that such behaviour is unusual for a comet and added that the absence of expelled material revives questions about why 3I/ATLAS exhibited non-gravitational acceleration during its approach to the Sun. That unexplained push is one of the reasons some theorists have suggested the object may not be a typical comet at all.

Loeb cautioned that the current viewing angle may be too narrow to reveal a tail if one exists. The object was photographed about ten degrees from the Sun in the sky, a position that can scatter or hide fainter features. As 3I/ATLAS continues to travel outward, the viewing angle will widen and allow more precise measurements. Loeb said this offers a clean test of the object’s true nature. If it behaves like a natural comet, it should soon be surrounded by a large cloud of gas and dust.