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‘Possible Hostile’ Alien Threat Could Attack Earth In A Few Months, Study Reveals

Shocking possible alien threat explained.

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Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb just dropped a cosmic bombshell—”Alien technology” could be heading straight for Earth, and it might not be friendly.

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The alien debate profiled.

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Sounds like science fiction? Maybe. But let’s rewind for a second. Because Loeb’s theories have already survived a few reality checks.

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His ʻOumuamua claims were controversial, sure, but they did spark legitimate debate in scientific circles—and got peer-reviewed.

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Loeb is no rogue TikTok scientist—he’s a tenured Harvard astrophysicist with serious credentials. He’s published over 700 scientific papers and authored multiple books on extraterrestrial life.

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The Initiative for Interstellar Studies, where Hibbered and Crowl work, is a legitimate space research organization exploring advanced propulsion systems and alien detection.

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They’ve long advocated for serious conversations around potential alien contact—not just blurry lights and tinfoil hats.

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Cosmic curveball revealed.

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A new study claims a mysterious space object, 3I/ATLAS, is on a crash course with our solar system.

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The bizarre object was first detected on July 1, hurtling toward the sun at more than 130,000 miles per hour, according to Live Science.

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Initially believed to be a massive comet, possibly 15 miles in diameter—larger than the entire borough of Manhattan—it now has scientists seriously spooked.

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Why? Because 3I/ATLAS isn’t acting like a typical interstellar object. Its speed and strange angle of entry hint at something far more calculated.

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The study, published July 16 on arXiv, hints at a chilling possibility—the object may be an alien reconnaissance craft, possibly hostile.

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The brains behind the theory unraveled.

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Loeb and his co-authors, Adam Hibbered and Adam Crowl from the UK-based Initiative for Interstellar Studies, suggest that the object could be some form of “technological artifact.”

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“The consequences, should the hypothesis turn out to be correct, could potentially be dire for humanity,” the study states bluntly.

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Loeb’s name might ring a bell—he made headlines in 2018 for claiming that ʻOumuamua, the first known interstellar object detected in 2017, could’ve been alien tech too.

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That object moved too fast and in too weird a path to be dismissed as a plain old rock, Loeb insisted. Sound familiar? 3I/ATLAS is setting off the same alarm bells.

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Back then, Loeb was accused of going full sci-fi. Now? He’s doubling down.

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Timeline of threat confirmed.

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In a Medium post, Loeb explained 3I/ATLAS’s orbit puts it on the far side of the sun from Earth—a perfect vantage point, he says, for avoiding detection during its brightest approach.

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That’s not all—Loeb pointed out that its current speed makes it unreachable by our best rockets. A conveniently untouchable visitor?

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“It is therefore impractical for earthlings to land on 3I/ATLAS at closest approach,” Loeb wrote, “Since our best rockets reach at most a third of that speed.”

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So when could it get here? According to Loeb’s calculations—late November to early December of this year.

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He warns that if the object is indeed of extraterrestrial origin, it may not just be passing through—it may be watching. Or worse.

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“If it is a technological artifact,” he says,“An attack on Earth is likely and could require defensive measures to be undertaken.”

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Skeptic viewpoints decoded.

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Still, not everyone’s on board. Enter Samantha Lawler, an astronomer at the University of Regina in Canada. She says this alien theory is “highly unlikely.”

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“All evidence points to this being an ordinary comet,” she told media outlets, “Just one ejected from another solar system, like countless others.”

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Even Loeb himself admits that the likeliest explanation is far less exciting—probably just another natural interstellar object.

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“The most likely outcome,” he concedes, “Is that 3I/ATLAS is a completely natural comet.”

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But here’s where things take a sharper turn—because 3I/ATLAS shares some striking similarities to ʻOumuamua.

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Both are unusually fast, oddly angled, and frustratingly hard to track. Both arrived from outside our solar system.

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And both conveniently avoided optimal telescope visibility—making it nearly impossible to study them properly.

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So is this an eerie coincidence—or a sign of intelligent design? Loeb says we can’t afford to assume the former.

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The countdown begins.

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“We should be open to the possibility that we are not the sharpest cookies in the jar,” he’s famously said. Translation: Don’t dismiss alien tech just because it sounds nuts.

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And here’s the kicker: if 3I/ATLAS is a spacecraft—it could be the first known visitor from another civilization… or the first strike.

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