NASA EXPOSED: Amateur Telescopes Reveal Shocking 3I/ATLAS Cover-Up!

The Most Important Images in Space History… Kept Secret by NASA for 43 Days

When NASA finally released the blurry images of Three-Eye Atlas, everything looked… too ordinary. Yet during the 43-day silence, amateur astronomers worldwide witnessed a completely different scene — seven jets of gas ejecting in illogical directions, matter moving against the Sun’s light, and a mysterious blue glow that did not match any spectral analysis.

What really happened during those 43 days? And why did NASA take so long to release images they had had from the start?


The Golden Observation Window NASA Missed

On October 2–3, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) had a perfect vantage point: just 29 million km from Three-Eye Atlas, precisely when the interstellar object was closest to the Sun — the moment when any unusual activity would be most visible.

This was a once-in-millions-of-years opportunity to observe a detailed view of an object from another star system. Yet instead of releasing the data immediately, NASA remained completely silent, citing government shutdown, staff furloughs, and no one to process the images.

The reality is:

  • MRO was fully operational

  • ISS continued running 24/7

  • James Webb was continuously observing

  • Hubble kept taking images

  • Deep-space probes were still transmitting data

No critical mission had been halted. The coincidence of the government shutdown and the critical observation period raises the question: Did NASA know something they didn’t want to reveal?


Amateur Astronomers Witness the Impossible

In Namibia, amateur observers Michael Jäger and Gerald Rhemann compiled 24 filtered blue images and detected seven gas jets from Three-Eye Atlas.

Not only did the jets eject in all directions, but some even pointed directly at the Sun, completely defying known physical laws:

  • Radiation pressure should push everything away from the Sun

  • Solar wind at 400 km/s should carry dust outward

  • All comets have tails pointing away from the Sun

The next day, two other observers — Frank Neibling and Michael Buckley — recorded:

  • Two anti-tails nearly 1 million km long

  • One normal tail 2.85 million km long

The anti-tails were a million times denser than the surrounding environment. Clearly, an active force was generating these gas jets.


The Mysterious Blue Glow

On November 5, Lowell Observatory recorded Three-Eye Atlas emitting a strong bluish-green glow.

Normally, cometary blue comes from diatomic carbon (C₂) fluorescence. Yet NASA checked multiple times and found no C₂:

  • James Webb: not detected

  • Hubble: not detected

  • Ground-based telescopes: not detected

A less-discussed hypothesis is that the light comes from the object’s surface, not gas, suggesting material or structures reacting to sunlight in ways never seen before.


Three-Eye Atlas Spins, But the Jets Don’t

Three-Eye Atlas rotates once every 16.16 hours. If it were a normal comet, the jets would:

  • twist and spiral

  • not stretch into straight lines millions of kilometers long

Yet the jets from Three-Eye Atlas are laser-straight, as if the object has a thrust stabilization system or doesn’t rotate in space at all.

The most plausible explanation: these are exhaust jets from engines, not natural outgassing.


The 7-Thruster Hypothesis

In aerospace engineering, large spacecraft typically use:

  • Six thrusters for stabilization along three axes

  • One main thruster

= Seven thrusters

The jets appeared strongest when Three-Eye Atlas was at perihelion, the optimal moment to:

  • change direction

  • accelerate

  • use the Sun as a “slingshot” to adjust trajectory

A strategy a spacefaring civilization would surely understand.


U.S. Congress Gets Involved

Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna demanded NASA:

  • release all MRO images

  • share data from the Parker Solar Probe

  • report any unusual findings at Mars and Jupiter

  • explain the 43-day delay

Political pressure forced NASA to release a set of blurry, low-detail images, unlike the higher-quality images captured by amateurs.


Conclusion

The 43-day silence raised countless questions:

  • Did NASA need time to analyze an anomaly?

  • Were they afraid raw data would cause panic?

  • Were they coordinating with the Department of Defense to assess interstellar technology risks?

  • Or did they simply want to control the narrative before release?

One thing is certain: amateur data outperforms NASA’s released images. The seven jets defying physical laws remain unexplained.

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