
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS is now on its way out of our solar system, never to return. The comet was only the third-ever detected object to originate from outside our solar system. Traveling at high speeds, it looped around the sun within 1.5 AU (one AU, or astronomical unit, is the distance between Earth and the sun) in October 2025; as of April, it is now past the orbit of Jupiter on its way out of the solar system.
3I/ATLAS is over a kilometer wide and is made up of dust and ices from the far-off planetary system where it originated. Using the advanced instrumentation of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), Caltech researchers examined the mid-infrared signatures (wavelengths of light 10 times longer than those humans see) that emitted from 3I/ATLAS as it approached the sun in an effort to understand the distant environment in which the comet formed. The paper is published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
“It’s a very interesting object,” says Caltech graduate student Matthew Belyakov, lead author on the new paper. “It has been traveling through the galaxy for at least a billion years. The high speed at which it flew past us gave just a narrow window to study it.”
During our own solar system’s formation, countless planetesimals—small clumps of rock and ice—coalesced together to build up Earth and other planets. 3I/ATLAS is an example of a planetesimal from another planetary system, and, as such, it contains different ratios and compositions of chemical compounds than the objects in our own. Instruments on JWST can detect and map many of these compounds coming off the comet and give an indication of where it formed in its own native system.

Two other interstellar objects previously visited our solar system: The first, designated 1I and known as “Oumuamua, did not exhibit comet-like activity when it was discovered in 2017; the second, 2I/Borisov, found in 2019, was relatively faint. In contrast, 3I/ATLAS is a very bright comet, making it a prime target to analyze with the sophisticated instrumentation on JWST.
The comet’s surface has been irradiated by cosmic rays on its long journey, and so its most volatile surface ices—such as methane—were only weakly outgassing as it approached Earth. However, as 3I/ATLAS was leaving our solar system in December, Belyakov’s JWST analysis showed that the comet began increasingly emitting methane as it was warmed by our sun. This change indicated that 3I/ATLAS had shed its ancient outer surface and began to melt its inner icy layers—which means that observations taken of 3I after its close approach reveal the underlying composition of this unique object, not just the chemistry of its topmost irradiated layers.
“JWST is going to look at 3I/ATLAS one more time this spring,” Belyakov says. “It’s already getting tough to observe; it’s now out by Jupiter.”
The team also observed the dust composition of 3I/ATLAS, to be reported in a forthcoming paper.
Publication details
Matthew Belyakov et al, The Volatile Inventory of 3I/ATLAS as Seen with JWST/MIRI, The Astrophysical Journal Letters (2026). DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ae5700
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Methane emerges from interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS as it exits the solar system (2026, April 16)
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