"As you will see below, 3I/ATLAS is supposed to fly past Mars at a distance of just 0.19 AU on October 3rd.
That is even closer than astronomers were originally projecting, and that is making some people nervous.
Hopefully the experts are correct and there is no threat of collision, because if this thing actually hit Mars it would be a cataclysm unlike anything that any of us have ever seen.
According to Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb, it appears that 3I/ATLAS may actually be emitting its own light…
Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS — which is zooming through our inner solar system — appears to be emitting its own light, according to Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb.
The observation by Loeb, if verified, would contradict NASA’s classification of the Manhattan-size object as a comet, the scientist argues in a new blog post.
Obviously, more observations will have to be done in order to confirm this.
But there are essentially two options.
If this theory is not true and 3I/ATLAS is not emitting its own light, Loeb says that this giant space rock is probably about 12 miles long…
If 3I/ATLAS were reflecting light, it would mean the object was 12 miles long, which is improbable, according to the astrophysicist.
I cannot even imagine an object that is 12 miles long and that is traveling at 130,000 miles per hour.
Can you?
The second option is that 3I/ATLAS is emitting its own light, and that would be even more ominous, because Loeb believes that 3I/ATLAS could potentially be 'a spacecraft powered by nuclear energy'…"