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Mainstream media is calling it a routine interstellar comet, but today, josh is stripping away the dry academic language to look at the chilling data the establishment wants you to ignore. In this solo case file, we track 3I/ATLAS—a cosmic anomaly older than our sun, moving at an impossible 153,000 miles per hour, and seeding our solar system with a completely alien water fingerprint.
But the real mystery isn't where it came from; it’s what happened when the SETI Institute pointed their radio dishes at it. Why did an automated system flag nearly 74 million narrowband signals during a single seven-hour scan? Was it just terrestrial interference, or does it have something to do with the highly anomalous 4-minute speed burst independent trackers caught right as the object began its exit? Turn the lights down, lock the doors, and decide for yourself if we just witnessed a routine space rock—or a 10-billion-year-old visitor saying hello.
By joshua davisMainstream media is calling it a routine interstellar comet, but today, josh is stripping away the dry academic language to look at the chilling data the establishment wants you to ignore. In this solo case file, we track 3I/ATLAS—a cosmic anomaly older than our sun, moving at an impossible 153,000 miles per hour, and seeding our solar system with a completely alien water fingerprint.
But the real mystery isn't where it came from; it’s what happened when the SETI Institute pointed their radio dishes at it. Why did an automated system flag nearly 74 million narrowband signals during a single seven-hour scan? Was it just terrestrial interference, or does it have something to do with the highly anomalous 4-minute speed burst independent trackers caught right as the object began its exit? Turn the lights down, lock the doors, and decide for yourself if we just witnessed a routine space rock—or a 10-billion-year-old visitor saying hello.