Here’s a quick update on the latest news about the 3I/ATLAS interstellar comet (Latam Comet is not a standard designation for this object).
- The most recent reporting indicates 3I/ATLAS remains a rare interstellar visitor that passed through the inner solar system in late October 2025, with follow-up observations continuing into 2026 as it moves on its hyperbolic trajectory.[1][4]
- Observatories and missions have captured higher-resolution imagery and spectra, revealing evolving activity as the comet’s ices respond to solar heating; early 2026 analyses discuss water, carbon dioxide, and organic species being released from the surface layers.[4]
- After perihelion, the object continued outward, with further analyses and public updates focusing on its composition and implications for understanding materials from other star systems.[3][10]
Illustration (example)
- A chart showing 3I/ATLAS orbital path: inbound from interstellar space, perihelion near the Sun, outbound through the outer solar system toward Jupiter’s vicinity in 2026 (illustrative only).
Notes
- News coverage varied in detail and chronology across outlets, but consensus centers on 3I/ATLAS as an interstellar visitor with measurable outgassing as it receded from the Sun.[1][4]
- If you’d like, I can assemble a concise timeline of key milestones (discovery, perihelion, Earth approach, Jupiter approach) with citations.