This is how space alien invasions start...............
It’s a comet.
OMG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
They’re here!!!!!!!!!
Well, yeah. That’s obvious. Because it actually is a duck.
It’s RAMA, I tell you. It’s RAMA!
It’s the Borg and I hope that hot Borg Queen pays me a visit personally
Let me know if it slows down and moves into earth orbit.
I’ll be in the shower.
I’m more concerned that this one and the last two are the leading edge of a larger number of objects that were jettisoned from some super nova destroying planets within that stars system....none that we knew of for a very long time then 3 interstellar travellers in a short period....
I decided to do a quick netsearch of Professor Avi Loeb and Cydonia.* He did not disappoint.
“Planets like Mars or Earth could have given multiple births to technological civilizations that were a billion years apart and hence were not aware of each other. Like stable parents, the planets recovered from the environmental impact of these civilizations over time”
He manages to combine Cydonia thinking with the Globull Climate Hoax.
*Cydonia - For those of you in Rio Linda, ‘Cydonia’ are the hilarious incantations after The Face On Mars was “discovered.” The speculators speculated that not only was The Face On Mars real; nearby formations became the Cydonia Pyramid Complex, with roads and canals.
Here is a real science/space journalist
If they come from deep space, outside of our solar system, why would aliens worry about that?
There is a very suspicious object (they call it a debris field underground)that appears to have crash landed inside a plateau at Skinwalker Ranch, UT.
Might be a relative
Very cool...
Interstellar Intentions: If 3I/ATLAS is a probe sent to destroy Earth, it’s doing a terrible job. I mean, come on, it’s just floating around like, “Uh, guys, should I blow up the blue planet now or wait for the next galactic memo?” Talk about alien procrastination!
Cosmic Misunderstanding: Maybe 3I/ATLAS isn’t here to destroy us—it’s just a galactic tourist taking selfies with Saturn’s rings. “Hey, Zorg, check out this tiny planet with the weird bipedal creatures. Should we invade or just photobomb their space telescopes?”
Alien Invasion Fail: If this is an alien weapon, it’s the most polite invasion ever. 3I/ATLAS is basically just hovering like, “Excuse me, Earthlings, I don’t mean to interrupt your Netflix binge, but I might have to annihilate you. Is now a bad time?”
Sarcastic Space Threat: Oh great, 3I/ATLAS might be here to destroy Earth. Just what we needed—another thing to worry about in 2025. As if climate change and Wi-Fi outages weren’t enough, now we’ve got alien overlords passive-aggressively orbiting us. Thanks, universe!
Just waiting for it’s last minute lunge to Mars that kicks one of it’s moons onto a direct collision course with earth.
Cash out everything now and have a big party!
Interstellar? I think not. That would mean this ‘comet’ would have to have traveled at least 25 trillion miles to get to our solar system. That’s if it came from the closest star other than our own sun. Isn’t it far more likely it came from way out in our own Oort cloud?
Seven reasons that 3I Atlas is not a comet! Sept 14 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDYY_NC3pAU
If sublimation is taking place, it’s not doing it in a normal manner, but in the opposite manner, and is evidence it was sublimating 5-6AU [ roughly between the orbits of Saturn and Jupiter ]. If you look casually, it looks like a comet, but on a closer look, it is not.
1. It does not actually look like a comet.
The light polarization coming from the object is not like any observed before. Light from the object more closely resembles emitted light rather than reflected light.
2. It does not have a tail like a comet.
It has an anti-tail; is one of 8 of >8000 recorded comets to ever have an anti-tail. Our point of observation is very unfavorable to even notice an anti-tail which in most cases are an optical illusion created by the perspective of the observer. The anti-tail we are seeing is nearly edge on. This ‘tail’ extends 10 times further towards the Sun than its width (or tail). 10X the width of the halo surrounding the object.
3. It does not behave like a comet.
When first seen at 900 million miles from the Sun, it should not have been producing any outgassing of any kind. But it was active, and so it was behaving differently than any other comet ever observed.
4. It is not built like a comet.
The SphereX infrared observation showed its composition to have no water at all, unlike ‘normal’ comets. The Webb observation showed a little bit of water. But most of the observed emission was enormous amounts of CO2 being spewed out 348,000km, losing 70kg per second. H2O loss was 4.5kg per second - less than even tiny comets. CO emission is also very low. These, are never before seen ratios.
5. It’s not ‘metal’ enough to be a comet.
The presence of unusual metals in its coma make it unique in the extreme. Nickel without any iron and cyanide [which changes color from red to green ].
Nickel without any iron is completely unprecedented in the history of all comets. Nickel without other metals is characteristic in the manufacture of many nickel-based alloys like memory metals, like nickel titanium. [ Nickel titanium possesses several advantageous characteristics, including high corrosion resistance, good biocompatibility, excellent damping properties, high fatigue strength, and non-magnetic properties. See AI on this subject for more details. ]
6. It’s too big to be a comet.
The extreme redness of the light implies the light is not from reflected material, but from the object itself, possibly making it 46km in diameter. But, if the light is from icy particles around the object, then it could be just 5km on diameter. Still, if its is that small, then it is 5X the mass of the comet 2I Borosov’s mass, with a diameter of 0.5km.
Mass loss activity for its size is not nearly enough to be a comet, as seen previously. It’s an object of size that should only be seen once in 10-20,000 years. Its very, very strange that we have not seen many other smaller objects, before we saw one of this size.
7. Its trajectory is too artificial to be a comet.
It’s a 500:1 chance that an object would pass through the solar system close to the plane of the ecliptic. Its doing this a a very, very convenient time that allows it to pass very close - within 1AU to 3 planets - Mars, Venus, and Jupiter. Odds are as high as 10s of thousands or millions to one.
3I Atlas is not a comet. But if it is, then astronomy books need to be rewritten to include this new class of object.
Just how unusual does an object have to be before it’s not a comet? If something kinda, sorta looks like a duck, then most astronomers call it a duck and move on. Like so-called dark comets - some of which have been proven to be man-made. Like most astronomers are determined to categorize 3I as a comet before we have enough data to call it one.
Is it from Klandathu? Stay out of Buenos Aires.
People want to believe in aliens but come on.