WHAT JUST LANDED
On February 15 — the same day NASA quietly confessed to the TESS “contingency” — a team of astronomers at the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory dropped a paper onto arXiv that should have made every newsroom in the world pick up the phone.
It didn’t. Because the headline they wrote was designed not to.
The paper is called “Pre-perihelion Volatile Evolution of Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Indicating Significant Contribution from Extended Source in the Coma.” Four researchers — Juncen Li, Xian Shi, Man-To Hui, and Jianchun Shi — used two Chinese radio telescopes to listen to 3I during August and September 2025, as it barreled toward the Sun. They were listening for two things: water vapor and carbon monoxide. The standard fingerprints of a melting comet.
They found both. And then they found something they didn’t expect.
The official conclusion? “It’s a comet with unusual chemistry from a cold star system.”

Pre-perihelion Emergence of the CN Gas Coma in 3I/ATLAS Temporally and Spatially Resolved by the 7-Dimensional Telescope Gregory S. H. Paek, Myungshin Im, Mankeun Jeong, Hyeonho Choi, Yoonsoo P. Bach, Masateru Ishiguro, Bumhoo Lim, Seo-Won Chang, Ji Hoon Kim, Jooyeon Geem, Willem B. Hoogendam
Comments: 16 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Subjects: Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP); Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) Cite as: arXiv:2602.12930 [astro-ph.EP] (or arXiv:2602.12930v1 [astro-ph.EP] for this version)
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2602.12930 Submission history From: Gregory S.H. Paek [view email] [v1] Fri, 13 Feb 2026 13:40:19 UTC (1,343 KB)