Not Aliens, This Interstellar Comet May Carry Life's Seeds From Before Our Sun

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Last Updated:November 04, 2025, 14:06 IST

Comet 3I/ATLAS is only the third confirmed interstellar object ever spotted, travelling over 130,000 mph and carrying chemical signatures older than our Sun

Scientists believe 3I/ATLAS could be a remnant from the early Milky Way, potentially formed 7 billion years ago ( International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA)

Scientists believe 3I/ATLAS could be a remnant from the early Milky Way, potentially formed 7 billion years ago ( International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA)

On 29 October, Comet 3I/ATLAS reached its closest point to the Sun, disappearing behind the solar glare before emerging again, this time visible through telescopes across the Northern Hemisphere. Travelling at more than 130,000 miles per hour, the comet has captured astronomical attention not only because it is only the third-ever interstellar object found passing through our solar system, but also because of the now-familiar question it sparks: could it be aliens?

But to focus on aliens is to undersell what this icy object represents. Scientists have been tracking 3I/ATLAS since its discovery in July, and what they have found is not science fiction. It is something far more interesting a visitor that may hold chemical clues to the formation of worlds.

Why Are People Talking About Aliens Again?

The “alien question" is not new. When the first confirmed interstellar object, 1I/ʻOumuamua, passed through the solar system in 2017, debate erupted around its unusual cigar shape and whether it might be a probe. In 2019, 2I/Borisov drew similar speculation, even though its comet-like tail and activity were entirely consistent with natural origins.

In the case of 3I/ATLAS, the alien narrative has re-emerged – mostly due to its interstellar trajectory, its unusual chemistry, and the fact it disappeared from Earth’s view for a short stretch. Yet for astronomers, these features are exactly what make the comet scientifically valuable, not mysterious.

The enticement of extraterrestrial life often overshadows the science itself. As Carl Sagan reminded us, “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." Not knowing everything about an object is not the same as proving it is artificial. The stretching of gaps in knowledge into claims of alien engineering fuels misinformation and distracts from real discovery.

Are Comets Carrying the Seeds of Life?

What if the most transformative thing about Comet 3I/ATLAS is not what it is, but what it represents? Interstellar objects like this one raise a profound question for Earth, could comets be part of a galactic delivery system, scattering the raw materials of life from one star system to another?

Scientists have long speculated about the possibility that life on Earth began with help from space. This idea, known as panspermia, suggests that comets or meteorites from distant parts of the cosmos might have delivered crucial organic molecules to our young planet. There is no proof yet but interstellar visitors add a new dimension to the mystery. They are not just relics of our solar system, but someone else’s. They carry the signatures of chemical histories that predate Earth itself.

What this really means is that 3I/ATLAS is more than just an icy traveller. With its unusual carbon dioxide-rich surface and scarcity of water relative to comets formed here, it is a snapshot of a different planetary nursery, a kind we have yet to visit or know directly. It is like saying that these comets are not just chunks of rock, but frozen archives.

If similar interstellar objects entered Earth’s orbit in the past or do so again in future, their effect might not be as dramatic as a collision, but potentially as quiet and long-lasting as a genetic nudge. An unfamiliar amino acid here, a new catalyst there. These are the subtle shifts that, over billions of years, might change the course of how planets become living worlds.

In other words, the fascination is not in whether comets are alien ships, but whether they played a role in making us and whether, in time, they might help shape planets yet to bloom with life.

How Do Researchers Track Interstellar Comets?

When an interstellar object enters the solar system, there is no early warning system. Comet 3I/ATLAS, for instance, was discovered only on 1 July 2025 by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS), a pair of Hawaii-based telescopes designed to scan for objects approaching Earth.

Once detected, researchers use a range of tools to continue tracking it: ground-based telescopes, space observatories, and spectral analysis. Even when optical images were impossible due to perihelion, data collected by space instruments provided real-time insights about its temperature, gas emissions, and orbit.

As the comet recedes from the Sun, further observations are expected. Heat from perihelion causes frozen gases within the comet to sublimate, creating a coma and tail that reflect light. The brighter the comet becomes, the more detailed the analysis of its composition will be.

Spacecraft observations have also been proposed for future interstellar objects. The European Space Agency has plans to use missions such as Mars Express and the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer to monitor 3I/ATLAS while it travels outward.

Was Comet 3I/ATLAS Really Hiding Behind the Sun?

The comet’s temporary disappearance was not mysterious at all. It coincided with perihelion, the point at which an object on a solar orbit is nearest to the Sun. In this case, that was 29 October, when 3I/ATLAS came within 1.4 astronomical units of the Sun about 130 million miles. That is 1.4 times the distance between the Earth and the Sun.

Because the comet was on the opposite side of the Sun from Earth, sunlight blocked optical observation. However, astronomers continued to monitor it using data from space telescopes. Earlier, Qicheng Zhang, a postdoctoral fellow at Lowell Observatory in Arizona, snapped what is believed to be the first optical image of the comet after perihelion using the Discovery Telescope on 31 October.

Zhang later reported that 3I/ATLAS had also become detectable using amateur telescopes, a surprising possibility given its distance and speed. By early November, the comet was appearing faint but present through standard telescopes across much of the Northern Hemisphere. The interstellar visitor was briefly gone, but hardly hiding.

Could This Comet Tell More About Origin Of Life?

Each interstellar object is a messenger from a distant and otherwise inaccessible region of the galaxy. They carry materials that were formed in different stellar nurseries. In the case of 3I/ATLAS, the unusually high levels of carbon dioxide and nickel offer rare clues about the chemical makeup of its birthplace.

This is not academic trivia. Understanding the chemistry of interstellar comets informs our understanding of how planets form, how organics spread between systems, and how unique or common our own solar system really is.

That 3I/ATLAS has already lost some mass during its time orbiting other stars and galaxies adds further complexity. It has been zipping through space for millions, perhaps billions of years not because it was designed to, but because gravity, chance, and time made it so.

What Should We Be Asking About Comet 3I/ATLAS?

Rather than “Is it aliens?" a more valuable question might be: “What can we learn from it?" Or: “How do interstellar comets form?" Or even: “What does this mean for how the universe works?"

Those questions lead to real answers. They take us to laboratory analysis, telescope data, and chemical signatures. They help build a picture not just of where the comet came from, but what our place in the galaxy might be.

As John Keats once wrote of “negative capability," the ability to remain with “uncertainties, mysteries, doubts" without rushing to fill the space with simple answers is a creative strength. Astronomy thrives on that strength.

Comet 3I/ATLAS is unlikely to be a spacecraft, a probe, or a message. It is more wondrous than that. It is an ancient traveler from a different part of the cosmos, carrying within it the fingerprints of processes older than our Sun.

To insist on an alien explanation is to shrink the mystery down to something familiar. To study it, test it, and accept what we do not yet understand, that is how discoveries are made.

First Published:

November 04, 2025, 14:06 IST

News world Not Aliens, This Interstellar Comet May Carry Life's Seeds From Before Our Sun

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