
By Samuel Lopez | USA Herald
November 18, 2025
For months, the world has been watching an interstellar traveler behave in ways no natural comet ever has. And tomorrow—Wednesday, November 19—NASA will finally host a long-awaited live event to release new imagery and data on 3I/ATLAS, an object that continues to defy the laws of celestial mechanics, comet physics, and, frankly, logic.
NASA’s announcement promises “the latest images collected by several NASA missions,” including high-resolution instrument packages that the public has never seen. As someone who has spent the past several months investigating this object from a legal, scientific, and evidentiary perspective, I will be tuning in just like the rest of the country.
But I’m not tuning in for the spectacle—I’m tuning in for answers.
Because the anomalies surrounding 3I/ATLAS are no longer fringe curiosities. They are documented, measurable, repeatedly observed, and independently photographed by dozens of individuals around the world. The scientific high-strangeness has crossed a threshold where serious questions must now be addressed in an open forum.
And NASA’s live event is the moment.
Why Tomorrow Matters More Than NASA Realizes
3I/ATLAS has already produced a checklist of behaviors that no natural comet has ever exhibited:
