Abstract 3I/ATLAS (C/2025 N1), the third confirmed interstellar object and the most extensively characterized to date, exhibits a suite of observational properties that are individually explicable as products of natural cometary processes but collectively constitute the most statistically anomalous interstellar visitor yet documented. This assessment synthesizes observational data from JWST, Hubble, ALMA, VLT/UVES, SPHEREx, XMM-Newton, ESA’s Juice spacecraft, and numerous ground-based facilities through March 2026. Key findings include: (1) an unprecedented water D/H ratio of (0.95 ± 0.06)%, more than 10× higher than any known comet, with methane D/H of (3.31 ± 0.34)%; (2) a CO2/H2O coma mixing ratio of 7.6 ± 0.3, among the highest ever observed; (3) significant non-gravitational acceleration peaking near perihelion; (4) a retrograde near-ecliptic trajectory with sequential planetary close approaches including a Jupiter perijove distance remarkably close to the Hill radius; (5) a symmetric three-jet structure with an extended collimated anti-tail; and (6) anomalous nickel-to-iron ratios in the pre-perihelion coma. The object’s isotopic composition constrains its age to approximately 10–12 billion years. We evaluate each feature through the lens of the Comet Artificial Disguise Hypothesis (CADH), demonstrating that 3I/ATLAS remains fully consistent with a natural ancient interstellar comet while simultaneously displaying the precise characteristics that would maximize the effectiveness of a hypothetical low- observable interstellar probe. The prevailing scientific consensus—that 3I/ATLAS is a natural comet—remains the most parsimonious explanation. However, this assessment demonstrates that our instruments cannot currently distinguish a naturally rare object from an equally plausible artificial disguise, establishing 3I/ATLAS as a concrete illustration of the observational mimicry threshold central to the CADH framework. Please see latest version for updates and more details.
Mark Hughes (Thu,) studied this question.