The astronomer suggests that a new interstellar object could be advanced by testing our intelligence

According to one of the most controversial astronomers, aliens were sent by a strange object taking place through our solar system from the inter -starry space, according to one of the most controversial astronomers of academic communities to see how smart we are.

The newly discovered object, known as 3i/Atlas, is only the third object of an interstellar of this kind that was observed when visiting our solar system. While most astronomers, including NASA, think this is a comet, Harvard resident Alien-Hunter Avi Loeb has repeatedly suggested that it was sent to us by an extraordinary civilization-and even can act as a “geling test” to humanity.

In a new blog post, Loeb, who became infamous in scientific strata, offering Oumuamua, the first interstellar object ever discovered in 2017.

“Any interstellar traveler is well aware that the planets have many icy rocks,” Lieb wrote. “This forms the remaining building blocks from the planetary construction process.”

“For this reason, the alien may think that any intellectual observer on Earth must be familiar with space rocks, because they have a regular effect on the Earth,” he continued, “not so fast.”

Although his case of 3i/Atlas is a Tervig Test sent by Alien Intelligence, he is quite distant, his claim that his colleagues are even lacking in human scientists is well arranged.

Quoting Chris Lint, an expert of “terrestrial comet” from Oxford, who said last month that Loebo’s foreign theory is “nonsense on pillars and is an insult to understand this object.” In the Milk Road Galaxy of Civilization ”.

Och.

As Harvard’s astronomer claimed, the universally scientific institution may have been mistakenly announcing that 3i/Atlas is a comet. He pointed out the new images of the Hablo Space Telescope object to support his statement that shows “glow” in front of it, but “there is no famous comet tail, as is the case for common comet.”

Loeb also pointed out that spectroscopic measurements do not mean that there is any “molecular or atomic gas that accompanies the glow of about 3i/atlas”, even more damaging the theory that it is a comet.

Loebi has one predominant alternative explanation of the origin of 3i/Atlas, if it is not a comet: that it is a “technological object directed to the internal solar system” and even perfectly more than its “arrival time” dedicated to a “close meeting with Mars, Venus and Jupiter”.

Obviously, in such a broad and unknown universe, there are other indispensable explanations related to all those anomalities seen in 3I/Atlas.

To test his theory of foreign origin, Loeb has another, even more provocative offer: sending a Morse code message to 3I/Atlas and see if anyone (or anyone) responds. Speaking to journalists, the astronomer said his ideal communication would be “healthy, welcome to our neighborhood. Peace!”

No matter how easy it is to reject Loebo’s constant flow of strange alien statements, it offers a charming alternate gaze to space rocks, and his idea that “3i/atlas is the dimension of the interwar periods” is actually quite romantic to take into account.

“As an optimist, I prefer to turn to a positive mindset,” Lieb wrote about an interstellar object. “The way we follow an initial greeting with foreign intelligence will depend on the data we collect.”

More about 3i/atlas: Congress Specialist calls for NASA to send his Jupiter’s probe, who chases a strange visitor coming from interstellar space

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