Teide Observatory imaged 3I/ATLAS sunward jet extending 10,000 km from nucleus on Aug 2, confirming typical cometary outgassing despite interstellar origin.
Miquel Serra-Ricart’s Two-meter Twin Telescope composite image (159×50s exposures, Aug 2, 2025) revealed 3I/ATLAS ejecting a sunward jet extending ~10,000 km from the nucleus, comprised of CO₂ and dust particles. The Astronomer’s Telegram announcement (Oct 15) confirmed typical cometary behavior as the 5-11 km nucleus approaches Oct 29-30 perihelion at 1.4 AU. The jet’s sunward orientation matches JWST’s detection of enhanced CO₂ outgassing in that direction.
The Curious Sunward Jet Phenomenon in Comets
Sunward jets arise when solar heating creates temperature gradients across rotating nuclei, with subsolar regions reaching peak temperatures driving preferential volatile sublimation from sun-facing “active areas”—weak spots where depleted mantling permits pressurized subsurface gases to breach the surface. 3I/ATLAS’s jet extends radially from the nucleus toward the sun (purple overlay in TTT images), perpendicular to the dust tail streaming antisunward via solar radiation pressure. As the nucleus rotates (period TBD from lightcurve analysis), the jet sweeps across the sky, with ejected material joining the coma or tail depending on particle size: micron-scale dust follows sunward momentum before radiation pressure dominates, while gas molecules diffuse isotropically after initial collimation.
What Happens During CO₂-Driven Outgassing at 3.3 AU

JWST NIRSpec observations (Aug 6, 2025, rH=3.32 AU) measured 129±1 kg/s CO₂ production versus 6.6±0.2 kg/s H₂O—a CO₂/H₂O ratio of 7.6±0.3, ranking among the highest observed in any comet and 4.5σ above Solar System trends at comparable heliocentric distances. CO₂ sublimates at 57 K (1 bar vapor pressure), far lower than H₂O’s 170 K, enabling activity beyond the snow line (rH>2.5 AU) where water ice remains stable. The sunward-enhanced outgassing creates asymmetric coma morphology visible in SPHEREx’s extended CO₂ cloud (≥348,000 km diameter) and Teide’s jet imaging, suggesting localized active regions rather than globally uniform sublimation.
Why It Matters for Interstellar Object Characterization
3I/ATLAS’s cometary behavior—developing coma, tail, and sunward jets—definitively classifies it as an active comet rather than dormant asteroid or exotic object, contrasting with 1I/’Oumuamua’s non-detection of volatiles and ambiguous morphology. The CO₂-rich composition implies formation near the CO₂ ice line (~3-5 AU) in its parent protoplanetary disk or prolonged radiation processing hardening refractory crusts while preserving volatile-rich interiors. Comparing 3I/ATLAS to Solar System comets tests whether interstellar disk chemistries diverge systematically from solar nebula conditions, informing exoplanetary volatile delivery scenarios and circumstellar disk evolution models.
Observational Challenges During Perihelion Passage
3I/ATLAS enters solar conjunction Oct 21, 2025, disappearing behind the sun until mid-November from Earth-based observatories. Mars Express HRSC and ExoMars TGO CaSSIS imaged the comet during Oct 3 Mars flyby (~30 million km separation), providing unique viewing geometry unavailable from Earth. GOES-19 geostationary weather satellite detected the comet during conjunction via coronagraph mode, while JUICE’s October observations supplement near-perihelion data. Post-perihelion reemergence in late November will reveal mass loss, nucleus fragmentation status, and evolved coma morphology after peak solar heating at 1.4 AU (Oct 29-30).
Link to Anti-Tail and Sunward Plume Phenomena
Recent Keck II observations detected a “puzzling anti-tail extension” pointing sunward—distinct from the Aug 2 jet—attributed to either forward-scattered dust grains in orbital trailing positions (syndyne/synchrone modeling) or projection effects when Earth crosses the comet’s orbital plane. Anti-tails (e.g., Comet Arend-Roland 1957) occur when large particles ejected pre-perihelion lag behind the nucleus, creating apparent sunward features when viewed edge-on through the dust plane. Distinguishing active jets from geometric artifacts requires multi-epoch imaging constraining feature evolution timescales: jets persist/vary on rotation periods (hours-days), while anti-tails maintain geometry over weeks as orbital configuration changes.
What the Future Holds for 3I/ATLAS Studies

November-December 2025 observations will track post-perihelion activity evolution as CO₂ production peaks near 1 AU then declines. Hubble Space Telescope time-series photometry will measure nucleus rotation period and pole orientation via coma brightness variations. Ground-based spectroscopy (VLT, Keck, Gemini) will characterize ¹³C/¹²C and ¹⁸O/¹⁶O isotopic ratios constraining formation temperatures and stellar environment elemental abundances. Long-term astrometric tracking through 2026 refines hyperbolic orbit parameters (eccentricity e≈1.000016) determining interstellar approach velocity and stellar origin via Galactic orbit integration.
Why This Discovery Is So Exciting for Cometary Science
Imaging 3I/ATLAS’s sunward jet validates that interstellar comets exhibit canonical outgassing physics despite 4+ Gyr isolation from their formation environment, demonstrating universal volatile sublimation processes across stellar nurseries. The CO₂-dominated composition challenges assumptions that water ice dominates cometary volatiles, expanding recognized diversity in protoplanetary disk ice chemistry. Successfully observing the third interstellar visitor’s perihelion passage—following 1I/’Oumuamua’s post-discovery and 2I/Borisov’s pre-perihelion characterization—accumulates comparative data informing occurrence rates, size distributions, and compositional varieties within the interstellar small-body population transiting the Solar System every ~10 years.
Conclusion
Teide Observatory’s imaging of 3I/ATLAS’s sunward jet, combined with JWST’s unprecedented compositional analysis, confirms this interstellar visitor behaves as a typical comet despite exotic origins. As the object emerges from solar conjunction in November, continued multi-wavelength observations will reveal how its unusual CO₂-rich composition evolved during the closest solar approach, advancing understanding of volatile processes across stellar systems. Explore more about astronomy and space discoveries on our YouTube channel, So Join NSN Today.



























