Author Topic: 3I/ATLAS could help protect Earth from dangerous asteroids.  (Read 22 times)

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3I/ATLAS could help protect Earth from dangerous asteroids.
« on: October 28, 2025, 03:05:20 pm »
Space
3I/ATLAS could help protect Earth from dangerous asteroids.
Elizabeth Howell
Mon, October 27, 2025 at 1:00 PM EDT
3 min read



Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/Shadow the ScientistImage Processing: J. Miller & M. Rodriguez (International Gemini Observatory/NSF NOIRLab), T.A. Rector (University of Alaska Anchorage/NSF NOIRLab), M. Zamani (NSF NOIRLab)


A newly found interstellar comet poses absolutely no threat to Earth, but a NASA-coordinated group plans to observe it to help our ability to monitor any future objects that might prove to be hazardous.

The comet, called 3I/ATLAS, is the third known interstellar object that has come through our solar system. As it flies deeper into the solar system before leaving our cosmic neighborhood some time between Nov. 27, 2025 and Jan. 27, 2026, the International Asteroid Warning Network is kicking off a campaign to observe the comet.

The project will serve as a training ground to not only predict the orbit of 3I/ATLAS, but to perform astrometric measurements (meaning, tracking the comet's speed and motion in Earth's sky, relative to objects like stars.) This will be used to inform future observations of comets or asteroids that may be a threat to Earth.

The network notes that comets are especially hard to observe, because their tails and "atmospheres" (comas) make it difficult to estimate overall brightness — which in turn affects pathway predictions.

Knowing the pathway of an object allows astronomers to predict how close it will come to Earth. In this case, 3I/ATLAS is coming nowhere near us. But its relative proximity (roughly 1.8 astronomical units, or sun-Earth distances, at its closest) is good enough for observations by small telescopes.

"The campaign will target comet 3I/ATLAS (C/2025 N1) to exercise the capability of the observing community to extract accurate astrometry," read a notice of the project Tuesday (Oct. 21) at the Minor Planet Center, which is a branch of the International Astronomical Union that catalogs and tracks small objects in space.

Citizen scientists are welcome to join in. If you're interested, register at this link no later than Nov. 7—as the notice provides no time of day, we recommend registering as soon as feasible. The schedule includes a workshop on Nov. 10, and periodic teleconferences through and after the observing period.

The International Asteroid Warning Network calls itself a "worldwide collaboration of asteroid astronomers and modelers" and was formed following recommendations from the United Nations and its space mission planning advisory group "for an international response to the near-Earth object (NEO) impact threat."

NASA, like other parts of the U.S. government, is allowed to perform essential duties despite the ongoing government shutdown. Comet and asteroid observations are considered a priority item as there is a small chance one could pose a threat to Earth, so NASA continues to track and publish information about them.

The agency has undertaken decades of searching to see if there are any potentially hazardous objects threatening our planet. Despite dedicated examinations of the sky, no imminent threats have been found. But NASA and its network of partner telescopes continue the search — just in case.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/3i-atlas-could-help-protect-170000374.html

Offline Lorizael

Re: 3I/ATLAS could help protect Earth from dangerous asteroids.
« Reply #1 on: October 28, 2025, 03:30:22 pm »
...the Minor Planet Center, which is a branch of the International Astronomical Union that catalogs and tracks small objects in space.

The situation is more complicated than that, but I don't fault the writer for not knowing the subtleties; I only know the details... because I'm tangentially involved! The Minor Planet Center operates out of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory up in Boston. It was created to fulfill a role stipulated by the IAU. It gets its funding from NASA, but organizationally is a sub-node of the NASA Planetary Data System's (PDS) Small Bodies Node (SBN), which operates out of the University of Maryland, which is where I work. SBN's PI is my boss.

Quote
NASA, like other parts of the U.S. government, is allowed to perform essential duties despite the ongoing government shutdown. Comet and asteroid observations are considered a priority item as there is a small chance one could pose a threat to Earth, so NASA continues to track and publish information about them.

And while this is true, the reason IAWN and the MPC are still operating right now is because they're not technically government entities. IAWN is a loose international collaboration and the MPC, as I mentioned above, is part of the federated PDS. We get grant money and orders from NASA, but operate through our host institution. So except in the case of nodes that are headquartered at government facilities, we're still doing our thing. (That said, a very extended government shutdown could be bad, because NASA isn't disbursing funds during the shutdown, and nodes only have so much money on hand.)

 

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