I recently stumbled upon this yesterday and red flags are being raised to make me question that 3I/Atlas is not a comet. Aside from no images being released by nasa, but it’s now changing colors again from blue, green, red, and now gold in color, not only that but it’s accelerating! Are comets suppose to change that many colors naturally????

by Rimuru_The_Junior

7 Comments

  1. Historical-Camera972 on

    >Dust

    >Ice

    >Coma 

    >Sublimation from solar exposure

    Yes.

    Irregardless of whether it is also an alien ship or not.

    It meets all criteria to be called a comet.

    Long time scale space objects have layered deposition on their surfaces.

    The “jawbreakers” of sublimation and off gassing.

    Yes. It will change color.
    For the same reason that my welding torch changes color when I adjust the oxygen/acetylene mixture.
    Different layers, different composition, different burn color appearance.

    There are many other factors, but this is pretty simple.

    I am willing to subscribe to the idea that 3i ATLAS could be something exotic, but until it does anything blatant, it appears to not be a global issue, and is on a trajectory to zip out of here.

  2. Rimuru_The_Junior on

    This whole planetary defense drill rocked me to my core because why the defense drill be conducting if the comet is gonna pass by earth instead of towards it? Another thing is that 3I/Atlas kept changing color with the recent one suddenly being gold in color. How many more colors is it gonna change and why are there no clear photos of 3I/Atlas if it’s just a comet?!