NASA, Earth and Manhattan
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Speculations about an alleged Planetary Defence Initiative stemmed from the International Asteroid Warning Network Campaign
NASA has activated its planetary defence network to monitor comet 3I/ATLAS, a rare interstellar object showing unusual behaviour as it approaches Earth.
NASA has activated a global planetary defense group to study a massive interstellar object exhibiting strange, possibly artificial characteristics
For the first time in history, the UN-endorsed IAWN has designated an interstellar object, 3I/ATLAS, as a planetary defence target. Learn why this historic campaign is happening now.
A UN-endorsed group focused on planetary defense has locked onto 3I/ATLAS as the mysterious interstellar visitor fuels alien tech theories.
NASA and ESA say 3I/ATLAS poses no threat to Earth. We explain its nickel-heavy readings, IAWN’s training drill, and why the Harvard alien claim lacks proof.
Spotted by the NASA-funded Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) on July 1, the third interstellar visitor is the fastest thing to cruise through the solar system at 60 kilometers per second. It is also speculated that this interstellar interloper could be the oldest object to ever pass the solar system.
I/ATLAS has officially been added to the International Asteroid Warning Network's Comet Astrometry Campaign threat list