MUFON's Photo Analysis Team Gives Update Two on 3i/Atlas
Analysis Summary
Summary
Bob Spearing is the director of international development at Luon. He discusses the interstellar object ThreeI Atlas with Mark De Antonio and Greg Cisco. They explain that Atlas is behaving like a comet, showing signs of cyanogen and nickel. As it approaches the sun, it releases gas, which affects its brightness and path. They mention that Atlas will not be captured by the sun's gravity and will continue on its path. The discussion includes speculation about its unusual chemical makeup and the excitement it generates among conspiracy theorists. The encounter has led to ongoing discussions and interest in the object, but they emphasize it is likely just a comet.
Program Intelligence Analysis
The discussion revolves around the interstellar object ThreeI Atlas, with participants analyzing its characteristics and potential implications. They express skepticism about claims of it being a spaceship, emphasizing its comet-like behavior and chemical composition. The conversation also touches on the history of NASA's transparency and the excitement generated by public speculation.
Avi Loeb claimed that two of the three interstellar objects detected could be spaceships.
Bob Spearing
Mark De Antonio
“The more we see it, the more comet it is and the less spaceship it is.”
Greg Cisco
“It's odd because it's interstellar.”
Managed by: MUON
study of interstellar objects
The more we see it, the more comet it is and the less spaceship it is.
The comet has a greenish hue as expected due to cyanogen.
The object is moving so fast that it can't be captured by the sun.
Avi Loeb claimed that two of the three interstellar objects detected could be spaceships.
NASA has a history of allegedly hiding things.
The closest the comet will get to the sun is around 1.88 astronomical units.
The comet's brightness is increasing due to outgassing as it approaches the sun.
ThreeI Atlas sparked the asteroid watch network into doing a live fire exercise.