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Key Developments Harvard scientist Avi Loeb is pressuring NASA to release October 2 images of 3I/ATLAS, an interstellar object he believes may contain alien technology based on anomalies including unusual size, missing comet tail, and possible nickel alloy composition High-resolution imagery captured by NASA’s HiRise camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter remains unreleased following the federal government shutdown that coincided with the imaging date The object is projected to pass behind the sun later this month and approach Jupiter in early 2026 before exiting our galaxy, creating a narrow window for additional scientific observation By Samuel Lopez | USA Herald Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb is calling on NASA to immediately release high-resolution images of the interstellar object 3I/ATLAS that were captured on October 2 by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, arguing that political disruptions should not impede scientific discovery. The images, taken by the HiRise camera around the time of the federal government shutdown, have not been made available to the scientific community despite their potential to resolve mounting questions about the object’s true nature. Loeb has spent recent months documenting what he describes as significant anomalies in 3I/ATLAS that distinguish it from typical comets and suggest the possibility of artificial construction. The object exhibits an unusually large size for an interstellar visitor, lacks the characteristic tail expected of cometary bodies, and data analysis has indicated the potential presence of an unnatural nickel alloy within its composition. These characteristics have fueled Loeb’s controversial hypothesis that 3I/ATLAS could represent some form of extraterrestrial technology rather than a naturally occurring celestial body. “The politics of the day should not sabotage science. They have the data. They should share it with scientists,” Loeb told NewsNation on Thursday. “They can wait with any press release.” The Harvard researcher’s comments reflect growing frustration within portions of the scientific community over delayed access to observational data that could either validate or refute extraordinary claims about objects passing through our solar system. The designation 3I/ATLAS identifies this as the third known interstellar object to enter our solar system, discovered by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System. NASA currently classifies the object as a comet and maintains it poses no threat to Earth. The timing of the October 2 imaging session has added a political dimension to what would typically be a purely scientific matter. The coincidence of the federal shutdown with the capture date has raised questions about whether bureaucratic delays or deliberate withholding explains the continued unavailability of the HiRise data. Loeb has emphasized that scientists should receive immediate access to raw observational data regardless of whether NASA chooses to issue public communications about the findings. NASA’s public classification of 3I/ATLAS as a comet and trajectory projections regarding its path behind the sun and past Jupiter are documented through agency communications. The existence of the October 2 imaging session by the HiRise camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is confirmed through Loeb’s account, though the images themselves remain unreleased. The anomalies Loeb cites regarding 3I/ATLAS including size, absence of tail, and nickel alloy composition are based on his analysis of available astronomical data, though peer-reviewed validation of these specific claims has not been independently documented in this reporting. The Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System’s role in the object’s discovery is established through the naming convention 3I/ATLAS itself.