New data from the James Webb and Hubble telescopes reveal that interstellar object 3I/ATLAS isn’t breaking apart but forming geometric structures in space, leading Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb to suggest it could be engineered — a stunning possibility that has left scientists both astonished and deeply unsettled.

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Astronomers around the world are in disbelief tonight as new data from the James Webb Space Telescope and Hubble reveal something no one expected — interstellar object 3I/ATLAS, once thought to be disintegrating, may actually be assembling geometric formations in space.

The discovery, first reported in a joint observation briefing late November 12, 2025, has shaken the global scientific community.

3I/ATLAS, already notorious for violating multiple laws of comet physics since its reappearance from behind the Sun on Halloween, has now entered an even stranger phase of behavior — one that defies every model of natural celestial evolution.

According to Dr.Avi Loeb, the renowned Harvard astrophysicist who previously made headlines for suggesting that 2017’s ‘Oumuamua might have been an extraterrestrial probe, the latest images show “structured, repeating patterns” around 3I/ATLAS that cannot be explained by typical cometary fragmentation.

“What we’re seeing isn’t random debris,” Loeb said during a press call on Tuesday.

“It’s a self-organizing process — fragments aligning in symmetrical formations, maintaining relative distance as though connected by an underlying framework.

That’s not how nature behaves.

That’s engineering.”

The claim follows weeks of escalating anomalies.

First came the inexplicable brightening of the object after it emerged from solar conjunction — more than 200 times its previous luminosity.

Then came the gravitational irregularities: 3I/ATLAS’s orbit appeared to shift mid-flight, defying known physics.

And now, new high-resolution data from the James Webb Space Telescope suggest a network-like lattice forming along the object’s perimeter, reflecting light in consistent geometric angles.

 

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NASA officials have not confirmed Loeb’s interpretation but acknowledge the data is “unprecedented.

” Dr.Monica Reyes, a senior planetary scientist with NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, called the findings “highly unusual” but cautioned against jumping to conclusions.

“The alignment patterns could be caused by complex magnetic interactions, or frozen volatiles behaving unexpectedly under interstellar radiation,” she said.

“But yes — the precision is unlike anything we’ve seen before.”

Meanwhile, at the European Space Agency’s mission control in Darmstadt, Germany, teams monitoring the object’s trajectory report that 3I/ATLAS has begun emitting faint pulses of light — rhythmic flashes occurring at intervals of approximately 41.

3 seconds.

The emissions were first detected on November 10 by the ALMA radio array in Chile, and have since been confirmed by observatories in Japan and South Africa.

“What’s striking,” said Dr.Yuto Nakamura of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, “is that the pulses are not random — they’re modulated, as if carrying encoded information.

When you convert the sequence to sound, it forms a pattern that almost resembles a signal.”

 

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Compounding the mystery are visual features captured by Hubble last night: thin, luminous “jets” of blue light extending from 3I/ATLAS’s leading edge — but in reverse.

Instead of trailing behind the object like a typical comet tail, the jets appear to project against the direction of motion, forming what astronomers are calling an “anti-tail.

” The jets flicker in sync with the object’s rhythmic pulses, leading some researchers to suspect an underlying system of energy emission.

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory has convened an emergency review committee to analyze the data.

In a brief statement released earlier today, a spokesperson described the phenomenon as “a potential non-natural morphology requiring cross-agency verification.

” The wording — cautious but unusually loaded — has only fueled speculation that the object’s origins might not be entirely natural.

Adding to the intrigue, leaked audio from a closed-door briefing at Harvard’s Black Hole Initiative suggests that Loeb’s team may have detected structural “nodes” forming at regular intervals around the object, spaced roughly 1.7 kilometers apart — “like the edges of a framework or array.”

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For Loeb, the implications are staggering.

“We could be witnessing the first confirmed observation of extraterrestrial engineering — a self-repairing or self-replicating object from interstellar space,” he said.

“This isn’t science fiction anymore.

It’s physics catching up to reality.”

Not everyone agrees.

Dr.Karen Michaels of Caltech cautioned against sensationalism, noting that the so-called “structures” could simply be ice crystals responding to heat gradients or resonance vibrations caused by solar radiation.

“It’s extraordinary data,” she admitted, “but extraordinary data doesn’t always mean extraordinary origins.”

Still, as telescopes worldwide remain locked onto the enigmatic visitor, the tension in the scientific community is palpable.

“If these alignments hold, if the pulses continue, then we’re staring at a paradigm shift,” said Loeb.

“Either we’re watching nature perform an act we’ve never seen — or something else entirely.”

As of tonight, 3I/ATLAS continues to move steadily away from Earth’s orbit, pulsing faintly, its strange lattice patterns visible only to the most powerful instruments humanity has ever built.

Whether it’s breaking apart or building something beyond comprehension remains unknown — but one thing is certain: the universe just got a lot more complicated.

Or, as one astronomer at Mauna Kea whispered while staring at the live JWST feed:
“It’s not dying. It’s assembling.”