Sandro KalandadzeQuispamsis, Canada
21 Nov 2025

 

We did it! 🚀

NASA has officially published new images and data on 3I/ATLAS, confirming that observations from multiple missions — including HiRISE on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter — have been made public.

You can explore the material here:
🔗 https://science.nasa.gov/solar-system/view-interstellar-comet-3i-atlas-through-nasas-multiple-lenses/

While the released image quality may not appear as detailed as many expected — especially considering that HiRISE was observing 3I/ATLAS at a much closer range than any Earth-based telescope — this still marks a significant victory for transparency.
I personally believe the images may have been down-graded or reduced in resolution before release, but the important part is: the data is finally out.

During NASA’s press briefing, most of the 12 anomalies identified by Dr. Avi Loeb were not addressed. The discussion stayed within the familiar narrative of “it’s just a comet,” largely ignoring the specific scientific irregularities and questions raised. But to be honest, many of us expected that. No surprises there.

Still — this is progress.
Maybe small steps, maybe imperfect ones, but steps forward nonetheless. And progress, even incremental, is better than silence.

This release proves that public engagement has real influence, and that citizen voices can help open doors to data that belongs to everyone.

Thank you to every person who signed, shared, and supported this call for open science.
Together, we turned curiosity into action — and action into results. 🌌

#OpenScience #3IAtlas #NASATransparency #Victory

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