AnnieA
Well-known Member
- Location
- Down South
Here's about a dozen cases of UFO encounters from people all over the world who didn't know each other.I really hope it is an alien craft. If only to get us humans to get over our arrogance that we are the smartest or only life in existence. It would be pretty sad and dull knowing we are it.
Did you catch the part where they said it's grown to half the size of our sun, and is still growing? I think they said half.
I got it right. And they're saying it's getting larger as it gets closer to the sun. But that's the size of the whole entire object. No one knows the size its nucleus, the actual rock (or whatever it is). It's coma/aura/halo is an extremely thick, massive, super bright and reflective cloud of dust, ice, and gasses. It's tail got massively long all of a sudden, too. Just weeks ago, it was so short, they hesitated to call 3I/ATLAS a comet.That would be a 400,000 + mile diameter object. You must have read it wrong.
An unusually good movie. I was able to buy a copy for myself. At the time, it was not readily available, but I wanted that in my collection.Made me think of the movie Don't Look Up, about two astronomers attempting to warn humanity about an approaching comet that will destroy human civilization, and no one listens.
I got it right. And they're saying it's getting larger as it gets closer to the sun. But that's the size of the whole entire object.
No, I am talking about the diameter of the object, which includes it's coma (aka aura, aka halo), the ball of debris around a rock (probably). Basically, the round part. And with 3I/ATLAS, the cloud of stuff around it is usually opaque.I see, I should have realized you were talking about the Tail's various lengths, not the actual diameter.
Some astronomers believe it is a chunk off a planet that was impacted by something either very large or extremely dense. Others believed it was part of a sun that exploded until space probes analyzed it's make up. And it's make up isn't like anything they've seen before. But our newest telescopes can see a lot more and a lot farther.As for the "thing" coming our way, I hope it doesn't hurt us. I doubt that it has intentions, however. While the Universe is made up of mostly boring empty space. It's big enough to host a lot of different kinds of things. Although it's rare, at least by human standards, things do bump into each other.
Atlas does appear to be getting close to Mars.It looks like a comet and quarks like a comet, but maybe it isn't a comet.
Meanwhile, a swarm of comets is heading our way.