2026年6月22日 / 美国东部时间下午1:03 / 哥伦比亚广播公司/法新社
天文学家周一表示,去年掠过太阳并途经地球的一颗星际彗星,其年龄可能接近太阳系的三倍,且是人类在太阳系后院中见过的前所未有的奇特天体。
这颗名为3I/ATLAS的彗星,是人类观测到的第三颗来自太阳系之外的访客,它不同寻常的亮度为科学家们提供了前所未有的机会,得以研究来自银河系其他区域的天体。
这颗太空岩石在去年7月被发现后,在网络上引发了热议,哈佛大学一名知名研究员推测它可能是外星航天器——这一理论遭到了美国国家航空航天局(NASA)的驳斥。
如今,全球最强大望远镜的观测结果正揭开这颗独特彗星的更多秘密。
根据周一发表在《自然》期刊上的一项新研究,3I/ATLAS的年龄可达1200万年。而太阳系据信形成于约45亿年前。
该研究的主要作者、NASA戈达德航天飞行中心的马丁·科丁纳告诉法新社:“它或许是人类在太阳系中观测到的最古老天体。”
这张由NASA提供的图片,展示了哈勃空间望远镜于2025年11月30日拍摄到的星际彗星3I/ATLAS,当时它距离地球约1.78亿英里。NASA、欧空局、太空望远镜科学研究所、D·朱伊特(加州大学洛杉矶分校)、M.-T. 许(上海天文台)、J·德帕斯夸莱(太空望远镜科学研究所) via 美联社
不过他补充道,仍存在“极端情况”,可以对这颗彗星不同寻常的化学成分给出其他解释。
这项新研究基于詹姆斯·韦伯空间望远镜和智利阿塔卡马大型毫米波/亚毫米波阵列(ALMA)天文台探测到的彗星化学元素比例,即同位素数据。
研究称,这些测量结果“揭示了与太阳系内任何天体都不同的元素组成”。
可能是“宇宙正午”时期的遗迹
研究显示,与太阳系内的彗星相比,3I/ATLAS的氘(一种常见于重水中的氢同位素)含量高出10倍。
科丁纳解释道:“根据我们对天体化学的理解,如此高浓度的重水,只能在极寒环境中形成。”
这意味着这颗彗星也可能是太阳系中迄今观测到的最冷天体之一,同位素证据表明它形成于零下243摄氏度的环境中。
目前仍不清楚这颗彗星在银河系中的具体起源地。
但研究人员认为,这些星际天体的形成方式与太阳系内的彗星类似——在新行星形成的剧烈过程中被抛射出去。
科丁纳表示,3I/ATLAS不受任何恒星束缚,可能在数十亿年间“沿着难以想象的广阔轨迹在银河系中运行”。
科学家们还发现这颗彗星存在一种奇特的化学富集度不足现象,这表明它形成于距离新生恒星相对较近的区域。
科丁纳称,它甚至可能是被称为“宇宙正午”时代的“遗迹”——在那个时期,约100亿年前大量恒星正在形成。
此前的两颗星际天体分别是2017年被发现的1I/‘Oumuamua,以及2019年的2I/鲍里索夫,它们的亮度都不足以让科学家收集到同位素证据。
NASA已发布多张3I/ATLAS的图片,其中一张拍摄于11月,展示了这颗彗星在距离地球约1.8亿英里的太空中运行的状态。
去年10月,两颗火星轨道器拍摄到了这颗彗星明亮、模糊的白色光点,当时它距离火星约18641135英里,在遥远恒星的背景下缓缓移动。在此前一个月的一张图片中,还能看到3I/ATLAS不断拉长的彗尾划过太阳系。
这张由NASA/欧洲空间局提供的图片,是哈勃望远镜于2025年7月21日拍摄的星际彗星3I/ATLAS,当时这颗彗星距离地球2.77亿英里。NASA/欧洲空间局 via 美联社
哈佛大学教授阿维·勒布此前曾因提出‘Oumuamua可能是外星航天器的观点引发争议,他此次也对3I/ATLAS提出了类似推测。
勒布在接受CBS波士顿频道采访时表示:“在获得证据和数据、明确它究竟是什么之前,我们应该将所有可能性都摆上台面——它可能是一块岩石、一颗彗星,或是其他什么东西。”
不过NASA已经驳斥了外星生命相关的可能性。外星智能搜索研究所(SETI)上月表示,并未在这颗彗星上发现“外星技术的证据”。
“仅仅是个开始”
多位未参与这项新研究、曾对3I/ATLAS展开研究的天文学家对这项前所未有的研究成果表示赞赏。
密歇根州立大学的达里尔·塞利格曼告诉法新社:“在获得这些测量数据之前,我们只能想想而已”,不敢奢望能获取星际天体的这类信息。
他提醒称,这颗彗星的年龄仍存在不确定性,但补充道,“可以肯定的是,它比太阳系中形成的任何天体都要古老”。
参与在国际天文学联合会小行星中心识别这颗彗星的天文学家彼得·韦雷斯称这项研究“令人兴奋”。
他告诉法新社:“这颗彗星正在离开太阳系,永远不会返回,因此未来的观测将变得越来越困难。”
不过天文学家预计,未来几年将发现更多星际天体,尤其是通过智利的薇拉·C·鲁宾天文台。
科丁纳总结道:“这只是一个令人兴奋的新领域的开端,我们还有很多关于这些天体的知识需要学习——以及它们能为我们揭示银河系的哪些奥秘。”
Interstellar comet that zoomed past Earth could be oldest and coldest object ever seen in solar system, astronomers say
June 22, 2026 / 1:03 PM EDT / CBS/AFP
An interstellar comet that blazed past the sun and swung by Earth last year could be nearly three times older than our solar system and is unlike anything ever before seen in our cosmic backyard, astronomers said Monday.
The comet 3I/ATLAS is just the third visitor from beyond our solar system that humanity has ever observed, its unusual brightness offering scientists an unprecedented opportunity to study something that came from elsewhere in the galaxy.
After being spotted in July last year, the space rock prompted excitement online, with one prominent Harvard researcher speculating it could be an alien spacecraft — a theory that NASA shot down.
Now, observations by the world’s most powerful telescopes are revealing more about the unique comet.
According to a new study published Monday in the journal Nature, 3I/ATLAS could be up to 12 million years old. Our solar system is believed to have formed around 4.5 billion years ago.
Lead study author Martin Cordiner of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center told AFP that “maybe it’s the oldest object to have been observed in our solar system.”
This image, provided by NASA, shows the interstellar comet 3I/Atlas captured by the Hubble Space Telescope on Nov. 30, 2025, about 178 million miles from Earth. NASA, ESA, STScI, D. Jewitt (UCLA), M.-T. Hui (Shanghai Astronomical Observatory), J. DePasquale (STScI) via AP
However, there could be “edge-case scenarios” that offer other explanations for the comet’s unusual chemical composition, he added.
The new research is based on the comet’s ratio of chemical elements, called isotopes, detected by the James Webb space telescope and the ALMA observatory in Chile.
These measurements “reveal an elemental composition unlike any solar system body,” the study said.
Possible relic from “cosmic noon”
Compared to comets in our solar system, 3I/ATLAS has 10 times more deuterium, a type of hydrogen commonly seen in heavy water, according to the study.
“That high abundance of heavy water can only really happen, according to our understanding of astrochemistry, in a very cold environment,” Cordiner explained.
This means the comet is also likely among the coldest objects ever seen in our solar system, the isotopic evidence suggesting it formed in an environment that was minus 243 degrees Celsius.
Exactly where this comet came from within the Milky Way remains a mystery.
But these interstellar objects are thought to form in a similar way to the comets in our Solar System — being flung out during the violent formation of a new planet.
Untethered to any star, 3I/ATLAS likely spent billions of years on “vast unimaginable trajectories around our galaxy,” Cordiner said.
The scientists also detected a strange lack of chemical enrichment on the comet, which suggests it formed relatively close to stars being born.
It could even be a “relic” from an era called “cosmic noon” when many stars were forming around 10 billion years ago, Cordiner said.
The previous interstellar objects — 1I/’Oumuamua, which was spotted in 2017, followed by 2I/Borisov in 2019 — were not bright enough to gather isotopic evidence.
NASA has released several images of 3I/Atlas, including one in November showing it move through space about 180 million miles from Earth.
Last October, images taken by two Mars orbiters showed a bright, fuzzy white dot of the comet, appearing to move against a backdrop of distant stars as it was about 18,641,135 miles away from Mars. The month before that, an image showed the growing tail of 3I/ATLAS streaking across our solar system.
This image provided by NASA/European Space Agency shows an image captured by Hubble of the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS on July 21, 2025, when the comet was 277 million miles from Earth. NASA/European Space Agency via AP
Harvard professor Avi Loeb, who had previously sparked controversy by suggesting ‘Oumuamua could be an alien spacecraft, made similar suggestions about 3I/ATLAS.
“We should put all possibilities on the table that it’s a rock, a comet, or something else until we get the evidence, the data that will tell us what it is,” Loeb said in an interview with CBS Boston.
However NASA has dismissed the possibility of alien life. The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute (SETI) said last month it had found “no evidence of extraterrestrial technology” on the comet.
“Just the beginning”
Several astronomers who have studied 3I/ATLAS, but were not involved in the new research, hailed the unprecedented results.
“Until these measurements we could only really dream about” getting this kind of information for an interstellar object, Darryl Seligman of Michigan State University told AFP.
He cautioned that the comet’s age remained uncertain, adding it was “a safe bet that it’s older than anything that formed in the solar system.”
Astronomer Peter Veres, who was involved in identifying the comet at the International Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Center, called the research “exciting.”
“The comet is now leaving the solar system and will never return, so future observations will become increasingly difficult,” he told AFP.
However astronomers expect to spot many more interstellar objects in the coming years, particularly via the new Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile.
“This is just the beginning of an exciting new field, we’ve got a lot more to learn about these things —and what they can tell us about our galaxy,” Cordiner concluded.
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