Alien ‘Hostile Mothership’ Could Reach Earth in 110 Days, Harvard Professor Warns

A mysterious interstellar object called 3I/ATLAS is racing toward the inner solar system, and one leading scientist believes it may be far more than just space rock. Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb argues the fast-moving visitor shows unusual features that could make it a hostile mothership rather than a comet.

Strange Object With No Comet Tail

3I/ATLAS was first spotted on July 1, 2025, moving at 135,000 miles per hour. Unlike every comet tracked before, it shows no dust or ice tail. Loeb points to this as evidence that the object may have technological design, possibly even the capacity to launch probes once it nears Earth.

Timeline to Arrival

  • Hidden behind Sun: September 2025

  • Closest to Sun: October 30, 2025

  • Projected Earth window: November 21 – December 5, 2025

The object will slip out of telescope view in September and reappear weeks before its closest pass. Loeb warns that disappearing behind the Sun could be a defensive maneuver, making the so-called alien spaceship harder to track.

Could It Be Reconnaissance?

The interstellar visitor will sweep past Venus, Mars, and Jupiter before approaching Earth. Loeb suggests this path looks deliberate, as if the craft were surveying planets in our system. He has even speculated that the encounter could be friendly — or dangerously hostile.

Division Among Scientists

NASA maintains that 3I/ATLAS is a comet, albeit a rare one. Oxford astronomer Chris Lintott has dismissed Loeb’s alien mothership theory as “nonsense.” Still, the lack of a comet tail and the irregular trajectory continue to fuel speculation across the scientific community and the public.

What It Means for Earth

Even at closest approach, NASA says the object will remain 130 million miles away. But Loeb warns that distance is not the issue. The real concern is intent. If 3I/ATLAS is an alien probe, humanity could be facing its first contact scenario in just over 100 days.

The Bigger Question

This is only the third interstellar object ever recorded, following ‘Oumuamua and Borisov. Each one has deepened the mystery of what travels through our solar system. Whether 3I/ATLAS is a strange comet or an alien spacecraft, it reminds us that Earth is never truly isolated.

Tonia Nissen
Based out of Detroit, Tonia Nissen has been writing for Optic Flux since 2017 and is presently our Managing Editor. An experienced freelance health writer, Tonia obtained an English BA from the University of Detroit, then spent over 7 years working in various markets as a television reporter, producer and news videographer. Tonia is particularly interested in scientific innovation, climate technology, and the marine environment.