Skip to main content

3I/ATLAS Flyby

Content of: 3I/ATLAS Flyby

Posted by Specola Profile 12/26/25 at 02:16PM Science - Tech - Astronomy See more by Specola

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:

Attention grabbing interstellar visitor 3I/ATLAS made its not-so-close flyby of our fair planet on December 19 at a distance of 1.8 astronomical units. That's about 900 light-seconds. Still, this deep exposure captures the comet from another star system as it gently swept across a faint background of stars in the constellation Leo about 4 days earlier, on the night of December 15. Though faint, colors emphasized in the image data, show off the comet's yellowish dust tail and bluish ion tail along with a greenish tinged coma. And even while scrutinized by arrays of telescopes and spacecraft from planet Earth, 3I ATLAS is headed out of the Solar System. It's presently moving outward along a hyperbolic trajectory at about 64 kilometers per second relative to the Sun, too fast to be bound the Sun's gravity.

Photo by Dan Bartlett

Click the Image to learn more about us

Snohomish, Skagit and Island County

Powered by Volunteers | 360-794-7959

Hunger impacts all of us | 360-435-1631

Read more from Pepe's Painting LLC

Giving Kids in Need the Chance to Read
  Non-profit organization - Seattle, WA