One of the most potent radio telescope arrays ever built is located high in the northern Chilean Atacama Desert, where the air is so thin and dry that breathing requires some adjustment. The 66 antennas that make up the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, or ALMA, are dispersed over a plateau at a height of about 5,000 meters above sea level. They are fixed on the sky, listening for the universe’s faint chemical whispers. Astronomers were genuinely perplexed when those antennas locked onto an unusual object traveling through our solar system in late 2025: a comet that had traveled from another star with a chemical cargo.
3I/ATLAS is the name of the object. The Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System discovered it for the first time in July 2025, making it the third confirmed interstellar visitor to ever pass through our region of the galaxy. The first was ‘Oumuamua in 2017—that odd, long object that sparked a great deal of conjecture and some truly bizarre theories regarding its origins. The second was 2I/Borisov in 2019, which was comfortingly familiar and behaved more like a typical comet. 3I/ATLAS is neither of those. To put it as literally as possible, it’s loaded with alcohol.
Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS — Key Facts
| Discovery Date | July 2025 (by ATLAS survey system) |
| Classification | 3rd confirmed interstellar object in our solar system |
| Previous Interstellar Visitors | 1I/’Oumuamua (2017), 2I/Borisov (2019) |
| Key Chemical Found | Methanol (CH₃OH) — extremely high abundance |
| Methanol-to-HCN Ratio | ~70–120x (among highest ever recorded in any comet) |
| Observatory Used | ALMA (Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array), Chile |
| Lead Researcher | Prof. Nathan Roth, American University |
| Published In | Astrophysical Journal Letters, March 2026 |
| Reference / Further Reading | public.nrao.edu |
Methanol, a simple organic molecule that forms on icy dust grains in interstellar clouds and becomes trapped in comets during the early, turbulent stages of planetary system formation, is the alcohol in question. In space, methanol is not uncommon. Finding it in the concentrations determined by 3I/ATLAS is uncommon. This comet is among the most methanol-rich objects ever observed, with ALMA data showing methanol-to-hydrogen cyanide ratios of about 70 and 120 on two different observation dates. For comparison, almost every comet from our own solar system that has ever been measured looks entirely different on this scale. It’s not a small difference. It’s striking.
Observing 3I/ATLAS is similar to taking a fingerprint from another solar system, according to American University professor Nathan Roth, the study’s lead researcher. It’s worth pondering that statement for a moment because it encapsulates the scientific value of this comet in a way that statistics by themselves cannot. The temperature, molecules that were available, and physical environment of the comet’s birth system are all recorded in its chemical makeup. For what may be an almost unfathomable amount of time, 3I/ATLAS has been transporting that record across interstellar space. It formed somewhere out there, under conditions significantly different from those that shaped the icy bodies of our own solar neighborhood.
Additionally, a technically significant aspect of the methanol release process was discovered by the ALMA observations. As sunlight warms the surface ice of most solar system comets, volatile molecules mostly flow outward from the nucleus, the solid central body.
This is the behavior of hydrogen cyanide in 3I/ATLAS. However, methanol seems to be released from the comet’s nucleus as well as from icy dust particles suspended in the coma, the glowing halo of gas and material that forms when the comet warms. As they absorb sunlight, those grains sublimate methanol, essentially acting like tiny comets themselves. It is technically challenging to map this type of layered outgassing behavior in any comet. It’s quite different to do it with an interstellar object for the first time in history.
It’s important to note what was known prior to the ALMA findings. When 3I/ATLAS was still relatively far from the Sun, the James Webb Space Telescope had previously demonstrated that carbon dioxide dominated the comet’s coma, which was an uncommon discovery in and of itself. As the object got closer and warmed up more, methanol became another prominent signature.
Planetary scientists will spend years piecing together the chemistry of this comet. Observing the data gathered from various observatories gives the impression that 3I/ATLAS came at the perfect time, when humanity’s observational instruments were finally advanced enough to truly read what it was carrying.
There is still much to learn about the planetary system that gave rise to 3I/ATLAS. The high methanol content suggests either a different initial chemical inventory, formation under lower temperatures, or both. Before being expelled, the comet might have spent some time in a denser, more chemically rich area of its home system. Another mystery is the ejection itself, the gravitational collision that launched this object into interstellar space. It is evident that 3I/ATLAS is more than just a comet. Astronomers are only now starting to decipher this message, which is written in molecules and comes from somewhere else.
