Replace (June 22, 2026): The analysis mentioned beneath is now printed on-line in Nature.

Worldwide Gemini Observatory / NOIRLab / NSF / AURA et. al
The guests we all know of from far past the photo voltaic system are uncommon. We’ve solely discovered three to this point: First, there was the oddly non-cometary 1I/’Oumuamua, found in 2017, adopted intently by the extra bizarre 2I/Borisov. Then, within the final 12 months, astronomers caught wind of Comet 3I/ATLAS. With only some months to watch the comet earlier than it retreated past view, they raced to gather information on this little world each earlier than and after its encounter with our baking-hot Solar.
Now, these information are telling a narrative: This comet got here from distant — not solely from us, but in addition from its guardian star. And it began its journey a really very long time in the past.
Prepared and Ready

NASA / ESA / Hubble
The latest interstellar comet zoomed into our photo voltaic system, popping into our view close to Jupiter’s orbit, when it was touring at 58 kilometers per second (130,000 mph). Its speedy and unbound, hyperbolic orbit positioned its origin far past the Oort Cloud, the reservoir of small, icy rocks that surrounds our Solar and from which most long-period comets originate. Simply by its pace alone, astronomers figured it should have traveled our galaxy a very long time — at the least 3 billion years — earlier than reaching us, since numerous gravitational interactions with totally different stars would have accelerated it over time.
Abnormal comets originate within the chilly outer photo voltaic system, the place not a lot chemistry occurs, so they maintain a fossil-like document of our 4.6-billion-year-old photo voltaic system’s earliest years, famous Martin Cordiner (NASA Goddard) at a current colloquium with scientists on the Harvard-Smithsonian Middle for Astrophysics.
NASA
“Interstellar comets, coming from totally different stars,” he added, “give us the chance to achieve out throughout area and time via the galaxy, to review close-up . . . the planet-forming areas of different star programs.” Cordiner has led a group in inspecting the comet utilizing the James Webb House Telescope, with preliminary outcomes posted on the astronomy arXiv preprint server.
Cordiner was already finding out cometary ices in 2017, when 1I/‘Oumuamua visited the interior photo voltaic system and captured his consideration. After Webb’s launch, Cordiner and colleagues requested the Webb group to try any newly found interstellar comets.
Their second got here in July 2025. “I got here again from a canoeing journey in Maine to a lot of emails,” Cordiner mentioned, laughing. “I couldn’t consider the day had come.”
Webb wasn’t actually designed to trace fast-moving objects — and 3I/ATLAS was shifting actually quick. However, by August 2025, JWST had captured the comet’s spectrum.
Because of its bigger measurement (about 1.3 kilometers, or 0.8 miles, throughout), 3I/ATLAS grew to become far brighter than the primary two interstellar guests. It reached ninth magnitude at perihelion, on October 30, 2025, when it got here nearest the Solar (although it by no means got here nearer than 1.36 au, exterior Earth’s orbit). Although 3I/ATLAS wasn’t well-positioned for observing from Earth presently — it was behind the Solar from our viewpoint — interplanetary spacecraft captured information throughout that point. However because of the early heads up, Hubble, Webb, and myriad ground-based telescopes managed to view it earlier than perihelion.
“Once I loaded up the [Webb] spectrum, I used to be simply blown away,” Cordiner mentioned. “Take a look at that CO2 characteristic at 4.3 microns — simply via the roof. And so little water.”
Comet 3I/ATLAS was turning out to be fairly totally different from nearly all photo voltaic system comets; water vapor normally dominates their comas. The article was nonetheless removed from the Solar when Webb first noticed it, at 3.3 astronomical items (roughly twice the space of Mars from the Solar). However even on the market, the place carbon dioxide is likely to be turning to vapor sooner than water ice, the comet was clearly uncommon in comparison with its photo voltaic system cousins.
After the vaporization of gases that occurred across the time, on October 29, 2025, Webb noticed the comet once more in late December. (So did Hubble and different observatories.) As anticipated, the Webb observations confirmed extra water vapor.

M. Cordiner et al. / arXiv/2603.06911
Submit-perihelion observations from the Subaru Telescope in Hawai‘i, performed by Yoshiharu Shinnaka (Koyama House Science Institute, Japan) and collaborators, confirmed the change. In outcomes printed within the Astronomical Journal, Shinnaka’s group notes that even with the elevated water, vaporized in the course of the shut strategy to the Solar, the comet remains to be odd in comparison with different photo voltaic system comets, nevertheless it’s additionally extra akin to 2I/Borisov.
The post-perihelion JWST information additionally confirmed clear fingerprints of methane, methanol, and ethane, so-called natural molecules. (There was nickel vapor, too, which Cordiner couldn’t clarify: “That does not make sense, however that is a query for one more day.”)
Chilly, Historical Origins
Most intriguingly, the group detected “heavy water,” that’s, water with a heavy hydrogen atom often known as deuterium. Deuterium has yet another neutron than common hydrogen (which has only a proton and an electron), and it joins molecules below distinct chemical circumstances. The group solely detected the deuterium as a result of there was a lot of it — fully sudden have been this a photo voltaic system comet.
A group led Luis E. Salazar Manzano likewise discovered extreme deuterium in information collected by the Atacama Massive Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) on November 4th, simply after perihelion. The researchers discovered distinct spectroscopic fingerprints of each common water and heavy water, enabling them to check the 2. They discovered 30 instances extra heavy water within the interstellar comet in comparison with the standard photo voltaic system comet — and greater than 40 instances the heavy water present in Earth’s oceans. Salazar Manzano and colleagues have printed these findings in Nature Astronomy.

L. Salazar Manzano et al. / Nature Astronomy 2026
Such heavy water abundance sheds mild on the formation of the comet’s nucleus, since there’s little motive for the ratio to have modified a lot since then.
“What we’re seeing right here is an object that does not appear to match our personal photo voltaic system, our personal comets,” Cordiner says. “It does not match close by protostars both. So that is one thing new and totally different.”
Seems, the type of chemistry that makes a number of deuterium requires two circumstances: First, it should have been intensely chilly wherever this icy rock shaped, as a result of reactions at these temperatures are likely to make extra heavy hydrogen. “The chemical processes that result in the enhancement of deuterated water . . . normally require environments colder than about 30K, or about –406°F,” explains Salazar Manzano.

M. Cordiner et al. / arXiv/2603.06911
Cordiner’s group argues {that a} second situation can be required: environments low in parts heavier than hydrogen. That conclusion comes from unexpectedly low hint quantities of heavy carbon (13C) within the comet’s carbon monoxide–dominated coma. Average-mass stars sweep their heavy carbon into interstellar area, so the low quantities of that aspect within the comet counsel it shaped earlier than these stars had an opportunity to exist. Cordiner suggests the comet shaped round a star within the Milky Manner’s preliminary burst of high-mass star formation, again when there have been few heavier parts to go round.
Cordiner cautioned that there are nonetheless many uncertainties in our understanding of the chemical fashions that result in this conclusion. However, the items of proof appear to be converging on a narrative concerning the interstellar comet’s origins: 3I/ATLAS may need shaped within the outskirts of a star system within the younger Milky Manner. Sooner or later, a gravitational nudge, maybe from an enormous planet, ejected it from its dwelling. It’s been ping-ponging via our galaxy ever since — for some 10 billion to 12 billion years.
Evaluation of this interstellar object isn’t completed but. Astronomers are nonetheless wanting on the mounds of information they managed to gather throughout its temporary go to, and that work will proceed to check the comet’s origin story.










