Tuesday, June 9, 2026

NASA’s Webb Detects Methane on Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has collected its first mid-infrared chemical fingerprint of an interstellar object during a recent revisit to comet 3I/ATLAS. The team’s results published recently in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The observations were taken using Webb’s MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument) on two separate dates as the comet traveled back out of our solar system after whipping around the Sun (post-perihelion). The first observation occurred Dec. 15 to 16, when the comet was about 205 million miles (329 million kilometers) from the Sun. This was followed by a second observation Dec. 27, when the comet was about 236 million miles (379 million kilometers) from the Sun.

For the first time on an interstellar visitor, Webb directly detected methane gas. Methane is highly volatile, meaning it sublimates from solid ice into a gas very easily. Its delayed appearance in comet 3I/ATLAS suggests it was buried below the comet’s top surface layer and protected from sublimation until heat from the comet’s close pass to the Sun reached deeper parts of the icy subsurface. The amount of methane relative to water found is surprisingly high, with few similar analogs in our own solar system.

Webb’s observations also confirmed that comet 3I/ATLAS remains unusually rich in carbon dioxide, releasing far more carbon dioxide relative to water when compared to typical solar system comets.

Both these findings point to a very different formation environment and chemistry than the vast majority of comets that formed within our solar system.

Additionally, Webb observed a sharp decline in gas production as comet 3I/ATLAS moved farther from the Sun, with water showing the most pronounced drop. This is expected behavior for an object like this – as the comet gets less heat from the Sun, the surface gets colder and less ice is being vaporized. Water, which is less volatile than methane or carbon dioxide, is quicker to “shut off” its gas production.

Webb observed comet 3I/ATLAS using MIRI’s Medium Resolution Spectrometer, a powerful instrument designed to break infrared light into its component wavelengths. This spectrometer is an integral field unit, which provides a spectrum at every point in a small patch of sky, allowing the team to simultaneously measure what gases are present and visualize their distribution around the comet’s nucleus.

The top image shows interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS as seen with MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument) on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, along with contours that illustrate where different gases were located at the time the comet was viewed. Water vapor spreads far beyond the nucleus because much of it is released from icy grains in the coma, while carbon dioxide and methane are most concentrated near the comet’s nucleus. The bottom image shows the spectrum, with the labels indicating the features from the various gases that Webb found escaping from the comet.

Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, M. Belyakov (Caltech), I. Wong (STScI), Image Processing: A. Pagan (STScI) 

Source: NASA’s Webb Detects Methane on Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS - NASA Science

Crystals of space and time: A structural phenomenon that may collapse into tiny black holes - Physics - General Physics

A team from Vienna and Frankfurt has found a formula describing a strange phenomenon: Space and time can form a kind of "crystal" that may turn into a black hole. The results are described in Physical Review Letters.

Alongside the famous gigantic black holes, physics also allows for microscopic versions. They emerge from so-called critical states, when spacetime organizes itself into a regular, crystal-like structure during a process known as critical collapse. A team from Goethe University Frankfurt and TU Wien has now succeeded, for the first time, in describing this phenomenon with an exact mathematical formula using an unusual mathematical trick.

Black holes usually form in spectacular events, such as the death of a massive star. But in theory, arbitrarily small black holes are also possible: tiny microscopic objects that can emerge from special critical states after the slightest addition of energy. Such states may have existed shortly after the Big Bang, when the universe was still a chaotic mixture of particles, potentially giving rise to so-called primordial black holes.

The theoretical possibility of such critical structures had already been demonstrated in computer simulations. Now, researchers from Goethe University Frankfurt and TU Wien have managed to confirm these results with a mathematical formula—using nothing more than paper and pencil.

Critical collapse

"Sometimes a tiny, seemingly insignificant cause is enough to trigger a huge and dramatic change," says Prof. Daniel Grumiller from TU Wien. "Take liquid water at zero degrees Celsius, for example. A very small change is enough to make the water freeze. The water molecules then spontaneously arrange themselves into a regular pattern and form an ice crystal."

According to Albert Einstein's theory of relativity, something very similar can happen in space and time. Whenever particles move from one place to another, they affect spacetime itself. "We say that spacetime is curved by mass," explains Christian Ecker from the Institute for Theoretical Physics at Goethe University Frankfurt. "Large objects such as stars curve spacetime strongly—for example, we can observe this when light rays are deflected by massive stars. But smaller masses also produce spacetime curvature, just to a lesser extent."

Just as physics allows water molecules to form a regular crystal out of disordered liquid water, relativity allows spacetime curvature to organize itself into a regular structure—a repeating pattern in space and time. A kind of "spacetime crystal" emerges. Physicists refer to the process leading to this state as critical collapse.

"This spacetime crystal is a very peculiar and fascinating object," says Grumiller. "It is a kind of intermediate state, an unstable point that can evolve in two different directions. It may simply dissolve again, leaving behind ordinary spacetime filled with freely moving particles. But if a tiny amount of energy is added, the evolution takes a completely different path: the inconspicuous spacetime crystal turns into a black hole."

Confirming an old hypothesis

Computer simulations had already suggested back in 1993 that black holes might form spontaneously in this way. Since then, researchers have tried to describe the process mathematically and derive the correct formulas—but this turned out to be extremely difficult. The team from Vienna and Frankfurt has now solved the problem using a remarkable trick.

"Our universe has four dimensions—three dimensions of space and one dimension of time," explains Christian Ecker. "But in principle, nothing prevents us from writing down physical equations for a larger number of dimensions—five dimensions, forty-two dimensions, or even infinitely many."

One might expect the theory to become vastly more complicated that way, but that is not necessarily the case. The team showed that, in the limit of infinitely many dimensions, some highly complex questions become surprisingly simple. The next step is to check whether the solution can be translated back to a smaller number of dimensions. In this way, the researchers were able to gain insights into our four-dimensional universe by taking a detour through a hypothetical universe with infinitely many dimensions.

"Our technique turns out to be remarkably stable. Depending on the desired precision, we can systematically improve our formulas using additional approximation methods," says Florian Ecker from TU Wien. "This gives us a new method for studying black-hole-related phenomena that could previously not be analyzed analytically." 

Source: Crystals of space and time: A structural phenomenon that may collapse into tiny black holes