3I/ATLAS, Alien Tech or Extreme Comet?! Aerospace Engineer Greg Allison

15 hours ago
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3I/ATLAS is only the third interstellar visitor ever seen — and it’s already an outlier. JWST finds a CO₂-rich coma (CO₂/H₂O ≈ 8:1!), polarimetry shows unusual dust behavior, and early images sparked debate over an anti-tail/sunward glow. Is it just a rare comet type, or could it be technology as some argue?

Greg Allison — astrophysicist, aerospace engineer, former NASA contractor — helps us separate solid measurements (orbit, chemistry, polarization, water detections) from the speculative headlines (self-luminosity, mini-probes, hostile “Dark Forest” takes). We also cover the Mars/HiRISE window to image 3I/ATLAS up close and what we could learn either way. Sources include NASA, arXiv (discovery, JWST, Swift/UVOT, polarimetry), Hubble/Gemini, and Loeb’s essays — all linked below.

Hashtags
#3IATLAS #Interstellar #GregAllison #LeakProject #JWST #NASA #AviLoeb #UAP #Space

3I/ATLAS, interstellar object, comet, alien craft, Avi Loeb, JWST, NASA, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, HiRISE, CO2 coma, polarization, Oumuamua, Borisov, aerospace, Greg Allison, Leak Project, space news

Greg Allison brings decades of expertise merging aerospace systems with space advocacy. As an Avionics System Safety Engineer for NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center (through BTI), he has supported critical safety frameworks. Greg’s engineering roots run deep—from ISS robotics at Grumman, power layouts at Mevatec, to payload operations at Teledyne, and now to next-gen platforms like Orbital Space Plane, X-37, and HyTEx at Hernandez Engineering. Beyond his technical roles, Greg champions spaceflight accessibility through the National Space Society—serving as EVP, launching multiple chapters, managing the HALO program, and earning NSS honors for his leadership. A thought leader at the intersection of technology and space expansion.

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