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Theoretical physicist Avi Loeb says 3I/ATLAS seems to be unusually large, doesn’t appear to have a typical comet’s tail and ...
The comet is hurtling our way at 130,000 mph, but will veer closer to Mars than Earth, keeping a safe distance from both.
The object, officially titled 3I/ATLAS, was discovered in July and is currently traveling toward Earth at an estimated ...
This DIY girls bedroom makeover on a budget features painting and stenciling walls, rearranging and repurposing furniture, ...
As the comet 3I/ATLAS plummets through our Solar System, NASA's good old Hubble Space Telescope has captured the best look ...
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has snapped images of a recently discovered interstellar visitor hurtling through our solar ...
Discovered last month by a telescope in Chile, the comet known as 3I-Atlas is only the third known interstellar object to pass our way.
A Harvard astronomer is suggesting that an interstellar object nearing Earth could be an engineered object — rather than a ...
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS shines in the sharpest view yet captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, helping astronomers determine the object’s size.
Scientists estimate the object to be more than 12-miles-wide, speeding at 37 miles-per-second, relative to the sun.
Built by Lockheed Martin and operated by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Juno launched from Cape Canaveral on Aug. 5, 2011, ...