NASA released new images of 3I/ATLAS as it plunged towards the sun, captured by a host of the agency’s robots and probes.
NASA spacecraft across the inner solar system captured new views of Comet 3I/ATLAS—the third known interstellar object ...
The space agency got a close look at the interstellar visitor over the past few months as it zipped by Mars and the sun ...
With the government reopened, the space agency at last released pictures captured by a fleet of government spacecraft of an ...
A comet hurtling through the solar system from interstellar space is exactly what it appears to be, NASA officials said Wednesday, moving to quash a wave of online speculation.
Because of these strange features, experts say the tail does not look like it is made from the usual dust and gas that most comets release. On top of that, the tail becomes dim very quickly, which is ...
The object is the third interstellar visitor to our solar system ever confirmed. It will reach its closest point to Earth ...
NASA has added interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS to its 'Eyes on the Solar System' app, allowing the public to track the object's ...
While none of the spacecraft have cameras perfectly designed to spot comets zipping by at speeds up to about 153,000 miles per hour (246,000 kilometers per hour), astronomers didn’t want to miss what ...
Comet 3I/ATLAS was discovered on July 1 by the NASA-funded Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) observatory.
Telescopes on Earth, along with multiple cameras in space, have captured a whole gallery of new imagery of this alien visitor ...
NASA has a number of telescope assets which have captured images of interstellar comet. They include: The Hubble, Webb, TESS, ...