New Image of 3I/ATLAS "It's Extremely Odd" Orbit & Anomalies Detected

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An interstellar comet—3I/ATLAS (C/2025 N1)—just made its close pass by Mars and it’s not a typical space rock. Fresh Hubble shots and JWST spectra show a tight, teardrop coma and a CO₂-heavy gas cloud—one of the highest CO₂/H₂O ratios ever measured in a comet. Polarimetry is also weird, with a record-deep negative polarization signature. Translation: this thing likely formed in very different conditions than comets born in our solar system.

In this broadcast we break down:
• The newest images and what they really show
• Mars flyby highlights and what probes looked for
• Speed, size, trajectory—and why it’s definitely interstellar
• The unusual CO₂ chemistry (plus water, CO, more)
• The optical “anomaly” puzzling astronomers
• What to expect heading into perihelion late October

Drop your questions live—if new frames or spectra drop during the show, we’ll react in real time. Like, share, and tag a friend who watches the skies.

#3IATLAS #Interstellar #Comet #SpaceNews #MarsFlyby #JWST #Hubble #Astronomy #CosmicVisitor #SolarSystem #Science #RumbleLive

Alt titles (A/B/C):

Interstellar 3I/ATLAS: Mars Flyby & New Hubble/JWST Data

3I/ATLAS Isn’t Normal—Images, Speed, CO₂ & Mars Close-Pass

The Truth About 3I/ATLAS: Interstellar, Fast, and Strange

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