For over two months, astronomers have been closely following an interstellar object — dubbed 3I/ATLAS — as it screams through the solar system at a breakneck speed.

The unusual visitor was only the third object from beyond the solar system ever detected, following ‘Oumuamua, which was discovered in 2017, and 2I/Borisov in 2019.

Researchers have been fascinated by the object, generally believed to be a comet, finding that it’s made up of far more carbon dioxide than expected.

Now, Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb, who has extensively examined the possibility that 3I/ATLAS is an artifact from an advanced extraterrestrial civilization, suggests that the object could be far more massive than previously thought.

By analyzing its trajectory, Loeb and his colleagues found that its “non-gravitational acceleration” was “smaller than 49 feet per day, squared,” in a recent blog post. We also know how much mass it was shedding in the form of gases and dust particles.

From this data, Loeb inferred that the “mass of 3I/ATLAS must be bigger than 33 billion tons.”

“Consequently, the diameter of its solid-density nucleus must be larger than [3.1 miles],” he concluded, roughly at the very top of the range of current estimates, based on Hubble Space Telescope observations.

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