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Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Chemical Composition Study

Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Chemical Composition Study

After its December 2025 perihelion, JWST observations of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS recorded extremely high deuterium and low carbon‑13, enabling chemical analysis of material older than the Solar System.

Key chemical signatures

  • Deuterium (D): JWST/NIRSpec measured deuterium levels ~30× those in typical Solar System comets.
  • Carbon isotopes: Very low 13C/12C ratio compared with Solar System material; consistent with formation in a very old stellar environment.
  • Methanol richness: ALMA measured CH3OH/HCN ratios ≈ 70–120, much higher than usual cometary values.

Formation environment & age

  • Formation temperature: Extremely high D requires synthesis in very cold conditions (dense, frozen molecular cloud chemistry).
  • Age estimate: Chemical pattern consistent with formation 10–12 billion years ago, predating the Sun.

Observations & methods

  • Instruments: JWST NIRSpec (near‑IR spectroscopy), ALMA (mm/submm molecular lines), ESO VLT (optical/IR spectroscopy).
  • Timing & publication: JWST and VLT observations made in December 2025 after perihelion; results published in Nature (22–23 June 2026).
  • Target advantage: Freshly warmed ancient ices produced a bright coma enabling remote isotopic and molecular measurements.

IASPOINT Booster Facts

  • Interstellar comets: 3I/ATLAS is the third confirmed interstellar comet after 1I/’Oumuamua and 2I/Borisov.
  • Deuterium utility: D/H ratios act as a thermometer for formation conditions in ices and organics.
  • Carbon isotopes: 13C/12C ratios trace stellar nucleosynthesis and galactic chemical evolution.
  • ALMA vs JWST: ALMA traces cold gas molecules; JWST NIRSpec detects vibrational/rotational features of ices and organics.
Last Modified: June 25, 2026

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