First Hubble telescope images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

jandrewrogers | 98 points

With Rubin Observatory coming online recently, we should be able to find many more of this type of event. So, it would make sense to have a more generic probe ready in standby and wait for the next interstellar object discovery. Then, send the probe to the interstellar object for a flyby mission. It would be revolutionary if the probe could directly detect the element and isotope composition of the comet tail during the flyby.

ycui1986 | an hour ago

The slew rate for tracking comets is something that I have not had to mess with before, but I adjust my little EQ mount when I'm tracking the moon vs deep sky objects. How accurate is Hubble now? How many of its reaction wheels does it have left? I seem to remember it being down to just one at one point. Does that add difficulty in tracking this object with its very high velocity?

dylan604 | 12 hours ago

Dumb question: Is it the smaller one (that moves, along the same axis as the background stars) or the bigger one (that's fairly static). What's the other one?

rkagerer | 12 hours ago

Noob Q: How do they know it's an interstellar comet? With the speed of movement between two frames?

amrrs | 12 hours ago

A lot of motion blur: have they tried adjusting the shutter speed…

throw0101b | 12 hours ago

While it would be cool if it were alien technology[1], it looks like an ancient comet?

[1]: https://avi-loeb.medium.com/is-the-interstellar-object-3i-at...

hooo | 13 hours ago