3I/ATLAS (C/2025 N1): Direct Spacecraft Exploration of a Possible Relic of Planetary Formation at "Cosmic Noon"
T. Marshall Eubanks, Bruce G. Bills, Adam Hibberd, W. Paul Blase, Andreas M. Hein, Robert G. Kennedy III, Adrien Coffinet, Jean Schneider, Pierre Kervella, Carlos Gomez de Olea Ballester

TL;DR
This paper discusses the discovery and trajectory of interstellar object 3I/ATLAS, proposing that spacecraft observations during close approaches could reveal its composition and origin, possibly as a relic from the galaxy's early star formation era.
Contribution
It introduces the potential for spacecraft-based observations of 3I/ATLAS during its close approaches, offering a rare opportunity to study an interstellar object from the galaxy's ancient epoch.
Findings
3I/ATLAS is likely a relic from the galaxy's 'cosmic noon' period.
Close approaches of spacecraft in 2025 enable potential direct observations.
Spectral and imaging data could reveal 3I's composition and origin.
Abstract
The interstellar object 3I/ATLAS (also C/2025 N1 (ATLAS), henceforth, 3I), discovered by the ATLAS Chile telescope on 2025 July 1, was rapidly revealed to be the third known interstellar object (ISO) transiting the solar system, with an incoming velocity at infinity of 57.9763 0.0044 km s. An examination of 3I's pre-encounter kinematics shows that it is likely to be an object from the galactic thick disk, and thus a remnant of the Galaxy's ``cosmic noon'' period of intense star formation 9 - 13 gigayears ago. This kinematic assignment of 3I to the thick disk can be tested observationally in the transit of 3I through the solar system. Unfortunately for terrestrial observers, the 3I perihelion will happen when it is on the other side of the Sun as seen from Earth, at a solar elongation of 12.80 degrees, rendering observation from Earth (or near-Earth space telescopes)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
