What Scientists just Found on New Oumuamua entered our Solar System will Blow your Mind...

What Scientists just Found on New Oumuamua entered our Solar System will Blow your Mind...

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1.3K Video Views·Jul 24, 2025  #techmap #techmaps #elonmusk

"What Scientists just Found on New Oumuamua entered our Solar System will Blow your Mind...
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What Scientists just Found on New Oumuamua entered our Solar System will Blow your Mind...
After ‘Oumuamua stunned the world, Earth is now playing host to another cosmic drifter from beyond the stars. Say hello to 3I/Atlas—officially named C/2025 N1 (ATLAS)—a comet that was discovered by a telescope in Río Hurtado, Chile, on July 1, 2025. But what’s behind the name 3I/Atlas?
The “3” means it’s the third confirmed interstellar object we’ve spotted passing through our solar system. Before it came 1I/‘Oumuamua in 2017 and 2I/Borisov in 2019. The “I” stands for interstellar, signaling that this object wasn’t born anywhere near us—it came from far outside our solar system.
What Scientists just Found on New Oumuamua entered our Solar System will Blow your Mind...
So, how do scientists know that? It’s all about speed. 3I/Atlas is tearing through space at an incredible 152,000 miles per hour (66 kilometers per second). That’s way faster than the 42 kilometers per second it needs to break free from the Sun’s gravitational grip. It’s going so fast that the Sun can’t hold onto it, which tells us loud and clear—it didn’t come from around here. Instead of orbiting the Sun like planets or regular comets do, it’s on a hyperbolic trajectory—a one-way ticket through our solar system, never to return.
What Scientists just Found on New Oumuamua entered our Solar System will Blow your Mind...
The “ATLAS” part of its name comes from the system that spotted it: Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS). This NASA-funded program uses robotic telescopes to scan the skies for potential threats to Earth. With observatories in Hawaii, South Africa, and Chile, ATLAS has eyes on the cosmos from multiple continents.
Just like its predecessors, 3I/Atlas is just passing through. But it’s making a big impression—literally. It has an eccentricity of 6.08, the highest ever recorded for any object in our solar system. That’s like calling its orbit not just unusual but extremely out there—open, steep, and wildly fast.
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