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Ancient Messenger: 11-Billion-Year-Old Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Reveals Frigid Alien Origins
Astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile have successfully peeked inside an interstellar "time capsule," revealing that the comet 3I/ATLAS originated in a planetary system vastly different—and much colder—than our own.
The comet, which was first discovered zipping through our solar system in July 2025, is only the third interstellar object ever spotted by humanity. While 3I/ATLAS began its exit from our neighborhood in December, a new study published in Nature Astronomy provides the first chemical "fingerprint" of its distant home.
A Chemical Surprise in the Deep Cold
For the first time in an interstellar object, researchers measured the abundance of deuterium—a "heavy" isotope of hydrogen. Lead study author Luis Eduardo Salazar Manzano, a doctoral candidate at the University of Michigan, reported that the findings were staggering.
"Our observations with ALMA indicate that the abundance of deuterium in the water of 3I/ATLAS is more than 40 times the value in Earth’s oceans and more than 30 times the value in Solar System comets," Salazar Manzano said.
Because deuterium enrichment typically occurs in extreme environments, the team believes 3I/ATLAS formed in a planetary system that was incredibly cold—less than 30 Kelvin (-405 degrees Fahrenheit). This suggests the comet spent its life on the outermost reaches of its original star’s protoplanetary disk, preserving its ancient chemical signature.
An 11-Billion-Year-Old Fossil
Perhaps most incredible is the comet’s age. While our sun and solar system formed roughly 4.5 billion years ago, earlier research suggests 3I/ATLAS could be up to 11 billion years old. This makes it a rare messenger from a time when the Milky Way galaxy was far younger and chemically different than it is today.
Planetary astronomer Dr. Theodore Kareta noted that these objects allow us to figure out if the planets "out there" look anything like the ones we have at home. "As our galaxy has gotten older, the kinds of comets it has built over time has changed," Kareta explained.
Looking Forward
While 3I/ATLAS is now heading back into the cosmic dark, astronomers are preparing for a new era of discovery. The Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile, which released its first images in June 2025, is expected to find interstellar visitors with much higher frequency.
These future discoveries will help scientists determine if 3I/ATLAS is a rare outlier or if the galaxy is teeming with these ancient, frozen fossils from the dawn of time.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
May 1, 2026


