The mysterious interstellar traveler 3I/ATLAS has taken yet another unexpected turn. First identified in July 2025 by the ATLAS survey, the object was initially described as a comet from beyond our solar system, streaking through space on a hyperbolic trajectory.
But in recent days, astronomers tracking the object have admitted it is showing signs of an unexplained slowdown in its approach toward Earth — a development that has already set off alarm bells in both scientific and alternative communities.
Remote viewers, who for weeks have claimed to perceive “humanoid presences” associated with the object, now argue the deceleration is the strongest indication yet that 3I/ATLAS may not be a simple ball of ice and dust.
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Transcripts circulating on remote-viewing forums describe tall, humanlike figures moving within what appear to be structured compartments. Viewers insist these impressions were recorded independently and yet share uncanny similarities, fueling speculation that this is not coincidence but confirmation.
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Mainstream scientists are offering their own explanations, attributing the slowdown to natural outgassing and the complex physics of interstellar bodies. They say jets of sublimating material can act like miniature thrusters, subtly altering a comet’s trajectory.
That is the official story. But critics point out that the same “outgassing” explanation was offered for ʻOumuamua, the first interstellar object detected in 2017, despite its distinctly uncometlike behavior and lack of visible tail. For many, the repetition of that narrative feels less like science and more like damage control.
The suspicious timing of the slowdown has not gone unnoticed. If 3I/ATLAS were only a frozen rock, why would its speed decrease so dramatically as it moves closer to Earth?
Remote-viewing proponents argue this is exactly what one would expect from a craft adjusting its course. The humanoid reports only add weight to the theory that this is an intelligently controlled object — not a passive visitor.
Even within academia, the debate is starting to spill into public view. Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb has long argued that unusual interstellar objects deserve consideration as possible probes or artifacts, and his recent comments on 3I/ATLAS emphasize the need to keep open minds.

