The much-anticipated NASA live to share the unreleased images of enigmatic exocomet 3I/ATLAS aka C/2025 N1 (ATLAS), proved a disappointment for enthusiasts who expected high-resolution snaps of the third-ever interstellar voyager to the solar system.
HiRISE Image of Exocomet 3I/ATLAS!
On 2 October 2025, MRO turned away from Mars to image 3I/ATLAS, only the third interstellar object ever observed passing through our solar system!https://t.co/HBvQml2k26 pic.twitter.com/TN4NSgT9b3
— HiRISE: Beautiful Mars (@HiRISE) November 19, 2025
3I/ATLAS ever since its discovery on July 01, 2025, by the Chile-based Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) observatory, has baffled scientists and the lay alike. ATLAS has so far discovered 1293 NEAs (Near Earth Asteroids), 112 potentially hazardous asteroids, 4,957 supernovas, and 110 comets, with a capability of detecting asteroids as small as ~20 meters. So far nothing has been more confounding than the comet 3I/ATLAS.

Avi Loeb, a Harvard astrophysicist, has listed 12 anomalies in the object, ranging from its trajectory, anti-tail, abundant nickel, perceived point of origin (WOW! signal), and more.
All eyes were on NASA, for the disclosure, which was delayed due to the government shutdown. Images from NASA assets included the HiRISE cam on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN), the STEREO mission, SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory), and the Psyche and Lucy spacecraft. Netizens have been comparing the images with ground-based stargazers taking phenomenally more striking images, including the following ones.
3I/ATLAS!
Ben Frederick captured the Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS📸 Camera: ZWO ASI533MC Pro
🔭 Telescope: Askar 71F
📍 Bortle 4/5 skies
Processing: PixInsight + RC Astro plug-ins
57 × 60s exposures @ gain 100, –14 °C#ZWO #ASI533MCPro #Astrophotography #Comet #3IATLAS pic.twitter.com/9ZDn9c1z3i
— ZWO (@zwoastro) November 21, 2025
🚨BREAKING SHOCKING 3I/ATLAS:
🌠NEW COMET 3I/ATLAS IMAGES — I AM SHOCKED.
This is the most recent and clearest look at 3I/ATLAS yet — Nov 20, 2025 — and it looks NOTHING like any comet approaching Earth.
IMAGES:https://t.co/CXodsbaawG
👇 Share your comment below 📷New release… pic.twitter.com/yDvLHFN44o
— SpaceTracker.space (@Ammar1176708) November 21, 2025
Taken at 0545h UT this morning. 40x15s shots of 2025 K1 (ATLAS) pic.twitter.com/GzcYJtNsOf
— David Strange (@dgs99) November 20, 2025
Interstellar visitor 3I ATLAS. Only managed a few minutes few clouds came over. pic.twitter.com/Yr5hGek5dl
— David Strange (@dgs99) November 19, 2025
Amid mounting criticism, NASA took to the social media and allayed the concerns stating
Lots of reasons…but in short, it’s not what these spacecraft were designed to do. As comet 3I/ATLAS swooped by, we jumped on the opportunity to turn our instruments its way and see what we could get.
It further explained with HiRISE image as an example
The left (pic 1) is what it was designed to take: images of the Martian surface which is bright, close, and stable. The right (pic 2) is what it was able to capture of the faint, distant, fast-moving comet 3I/ATLAS. True, it’s not magazine cover material—but it is very useful scientifically!

pic 1

pic 2
Lots of reasons…but in short, it’s not what these spacecraft were designed to do. As comet 3I/ATLAS swooped by, we jumped on the opportunity to turn our instruments its way and see what we could get. Take HiRISE as an example.👇
The left is what it was… pic.twitter.com/A5NuecHYWb
— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) November 20, 2025
❓Timing❓
These were the images taken during the government shutdown. While our spacecraft were still permitted to operate, our content releases were required to be paused. Now that we’re fully operational again, we’re sharing everything they’ve observed over the past few weeks.
— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) November 20, 2025
See Also: 3I/ATLAS: Know How Big Is The Interstellar Comet As It Approaches Closest To Earth On December 19


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