Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS is blasting out a bunch of methane. Here’s why that’s weird
RSS SUMMARY · AGGREGATED FROM SPACE
The James Webb Space Telescope observed a large amount of methane around 3I/ATLAS, revealing just how different it is from comets from our solar system.
The James Webb Space Telescope observed a large amount of methane around 3I/ATLAS, revealing just how different it is from comets from our solar system.
The James Webb Space Telescope observed a large amount of methane around 3I/ATLAS, revealing just how different it is from comets from our solar system.
Continue Reading
The full story continues on Space.
Story Sentry shows a short summary aggregated via RSS. The complete article — original photography, charts, and reporting — lives with the publisher.
The Source
SPACE
Science
Glittering star cluster image reveals missing patch of stars: ‘We were not looking for the gap, but we found it’
SPACE·15h ago·3 min read
Science
August 2026 lunar eclipse: Everything you need to know about the 96% ‘blood moon’
SPACE·17h ago·3 min read
Science
SpaceX launches back-to-back Starlink missions from both coasts 19 hours apart (photos)
SPACE·18h ago·3 min read
Science
12 of the weirdest ‘Masters of the Universe’ characters
SPACE·19h ago·3 min read
Related
On this beat
Science
Volcano Minute — What happened to the leaves around Kīlauea summit?
USGS·16h ago·3 min read
Science
Volcano Watch — “Stick Season” in Hawaii? What Happened to the Leaves around Kīlauea Summit?
USGS·15h ago·3 min read
Science
Not to Alarm Anyone, but Flesh-Eating Screwworms Have Entered the US
WIRED·15h ago·3 min read
Science
Glittering star cluster image reveals missing patch of stars: ‘We were not looking for the gap, but we found it’
SPACE·15h ago·3 min read
