Congresswoman’s Demand for NASA’s Secret 3I/ATLAS Images Raises National Pressure for Immediate Release Now That The Government Shutdown Has Ended

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Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, speaking at a memorial service for Charlie Kirk in Glendale, Arizona in September 2025.

Key Takeaways

  • A government shutdown ended but NASA’s secrecy remains.
  • The clearest images of an interstellar visitor sit sealed from the world.
  • A congressional letter may now be the spark that ignites national demand for answers.

By Samuel Lopez | USA Herald

USA HERALD – For weeks, scientists, journalists, and citizens following the accelerating mysteries of 3I/ATLAS have waited for NASA to release the HiRISE images captured on October 2 and 3, 2025.

Those images were taken at the height of the government shutdown, a moment when NASA’s internal communications slowed and public-facing data releases froze. The shutdown is now over. The nation is fully operational again. Yet the highest-resolution images ever captured of an interstellar object remain locked away from the public, the scientific community, and—until now—Congress.

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On October 31, 2025, Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna formally confronted that silence. In a sharply worded letter addressed to Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy, Luna demanded the immediate release of the HiRISE imagery of 3I/ATLAS along with supplementary data from Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Perseverance, Juno, the Parker Solar Probe, the James Webb Telescope, and all other NASA missions that may have observed the object during its inbound trajectory and perihelion passage.

The letter is unambiguous in its tone: the world is watching, and withholding the most important observational data in the history of interstellar studies is no longer acceptable.

The HiRISE camera aboard Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter captured images at a spatial resolution roughly three times sharper than the best images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope on July 21. These frames likely represent the clearest existing view of 3I/ATLAS’s glow field, jet geometry, and thermal behavior.

They may confirm or challenge the increasingly anomalous characteristics we have documented throughout the year: the asymmetric jet structure, the anti-tail orientation, the asymmetric brightening at perihelion, the mass-loss signatures that do not match natural expectations, and the now internationally discussed absorption at 1665 and 1667 MHz recorded by South Africa’s MeerKAT radio observatory.

When combined with the Voyager-era understanding of hydroxyl chemistry and solar plasma, these images could help explain whether 3I/ATLAS is simply behaving like a natural comet under extreme stress or continuing to defy natural models in ways that demand deeper scrutiny.

Luna’s letter goes further than demanding photographs. She specifically requests any unusual detections near Mars around October 3, when 3I/ATLAS passed within 30 million kilometers of the planet. She asks NASA to disclose all relevant readings from the Parker Solar Probe, one of the closest solar-monitoring instruments available. She urges the agency to direct Juno—currently orbiting Jupiter—to use its radio sensors to gather additional data from a unique vantage point.

And she revives a broader transparency issue by requesting the release of all interstellar meteor data stored in the CNEOS database, including discrepancies in the infamous 2014 Papua New Guinea interstellar meteor entry.

For weeks, I and many others in the scientific press have been urging NASA to acknowledge the public’s right to transparent scientific data, especially when the object in question is moving toward an Earth-approach window on December 19.

The public is not asking for speculation. The public is asking for the raw data that allows independent scientists, universities, and global observatories to perform their own analyses. NASA has always been the gold standard of scientific openness. But with 3I/ATLAS, that reputation is being tested.

Now that Luna has formally stepped in, the question becomes unavoidable. With the shutdown over, with Congress requesting immediate compliance, and with global observatories publishing daily updates on 3I/ATLAS’s increasingly strange behavior, why has NASA not yet released the HiRISE dataset?

And if the agency remains silent, is it time for the President of the United States—Donald J. Trump—to intervene and order the public release of the imagery and sensor data? One could argue that this is no longer just an internal agency matter.

When an interstellar object exhibits unprecedented behavior, when radio-frequency anomalies are detected days before perihelion, when scientists like Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb describe the object as a one-in-one-hundred-million natural occurrence, the public deserves clarity, not delay.

This moment demands accountability at the highest levels. The scientific community has been forced to study 3I/ATLAS with incomplete information for weeks. Transparency is not optional. It is a catalyst for scientific truth.

As the object continues its outbound trajectory toward Earth’s December 19 approach window, we are running out of days where new data can be meaningfully contextualized. The release of the HiRISE images is no longer a courtesy. It is a necessity for global understanding.

NASA can resolve this with a single upload. The agency can choose openness or leave the decision to the President. The era of silence surrounding 3I/ATLAS is ending one way or another. What happens next depends on whether NASA chooses transparency or forces the nation to demand it.