NASA publishes close-up images of an interstellar comet making a rare flyby

NASA publishes close-up images of an interstellar comet making a rare flyby

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NASA released close-up images on Wednesday rare interstellar comet that is making a single pass through the solar system.

One of the images shows the comet, also known as 3I/ATLASas it moves through space about 190 million miles from Earth. It was taken from Manciano, Italy.

NASA publishes close-up images of an interstellar comet making a rare flyby
This photo provided by Gianluca Masi shows the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS as it passes through space, 190 million miles from Earth, on Wednesday, November 19, 2025. The image was taken from Manciano, Italy. Gianluca Masi / AP

The comet was first discovered in July and has been photographed several times. At the beginning of August, published images showed the comet from about 277 million miles away. a month ago, Images taken by two Mars orbiters. showed a bright, fuzzy white dot of the comet about 18,641,135 miles away from Mars.

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Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS, orbiting in the center, as seen by the panchromatic L’LORRI, or black-and-white, imager on NASA’s Lucy spacecraft. This image was obtained by stacking a series of images taken on September 16, 2025, as the comet approached Mars. NASA/Goddard/SwRI/JHU-APL

3I/ATLAS is only the third confirmed interstellar comet to enter our solar system.

The comet is visible from Earth in the predawn sky using binoculars or a telescope.

“Everyone who has control of a telescope wants to see it because it’s a unique and exciting opportunity,” NASA acting director of astrophysics Shawn Domagal-Goldman told The News.

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This movie shows PUNCH’s observations of comet 3I/ATLAS from September 28 to October 10, 2025, when the comet was between 231 and 235 million miles from Earth. NASA/Southwest Research Institute

The comet will make its closest approach to Earth on Friday, December 19, at about 170 million miles, which is almost twice the Earth-Sun distance. NASA’s spacecraft will continue to follow it as it moves through the solar system, crossing Jupiter’s orbit in spring 2026.

ESA’s Jupiter-bound Juice spacecraft has been pointing its cameras and scientific instruments at the comet all month, particularly after it made its closest pass to the sun. But scientists won’t get any of these observations until February because Juice’s main antenna serves as a heat shield while it’s close to the sun, limiting data flow.

Named for the telescope in Chile that first detected it, the comet is believed to be between 1,444 feet and 3.5 miles in diameter. Observations indicate that the exceptionally fast-moving comet may have originated in a star system older than our own, “which gives me goosebumps thinking about it,” said NASA scientist Tom Statler.

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The High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter captured this image of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS on October 2, 2025. NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona

“That means that 3I/ATLAS is not just a window to another solar system, it is a window to the deep past and so deep into the past that it predates even the formation of our Earth and our sun,” Statler told reporters.

NASA officials have dismissed rumors that the “friendly visitor to the solar system” could actually be an extraterrestrial spacecraft.

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