How Manhattan-sized 3I/ATLAS comet could actually help protect Earth from future asteroids
The fate of the world could rest on ATLAS’ shoulders.
Contrary to allegations that 31/ATLAS is potentially hostile alien tech, the Manhattan-sized comet could provide potentially Earth-saving intel.
Researchers claim that a NASA-backed campaign to track the interstellar object zipping through our solar system could help us monitor other hazardous objects in the future.
From November 27, 2025, through January 27, 2026 — when the 31/ATLAS is slated to depart our solar system — the International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN) will be conducting a “comet campaign” to refine methods for pinpointing its location, Space.com reported.

Along with predicting the orbit, the so-called worldwide coalition of space experts will “hold a workshop on techniques to correctly measure comet astrometry — a transformation without a change to a figure’s shape or size, such as rotation or reflection. This will reportedly help form the blueprint for how we monitor other comets and asteroids that may pose a threat to our planet.