Weird to stumble on a song and the first verse has eerie similarities to the novel I’m writing…
Garfield, cat MD*
The elderly woman stumbled over the cat, fell, and couldn't get up. At the hospital, they found several broken ribs. They also noticed an unrelated suspicious spot. Which turned out to be cancer. Detected early thanks to the cat. Treated, and looking great.
Life, weird as ever.
[* Meow Dummy]
When 4 "Coincidences" Stop Being Coincidences
A 5.6km object is heading toward Jupiter with four characteristics that break the rules:
🎯 Targeting precision - Arriving at the exact gravitational boundary used for orbital insertion (1 in 25,000 odds)
⚖️ Impossible density - Would need to be lighter than cotton candy while staying intact (physics violation) (or hollow)
🔬 Industrial chemistry - Spectral signature matches refined aerospace alloys, not space ice
🎮 Active control - Jets that defy rotational physics without stabilization systems
Combined probability: <1 in 100,000
But that is just a number, let's visualise 1:100000;
3I/ATLAS arriving at Jupiter's Hill sphere boundary after a course correction is like watching five cars in a row all have license plates ending in 777 - while they're all driving to the same address - and they all arrived exactly on time.
Or
Three spins of a Roulette Wheel landing on the same number.
March 2026 Jupiter encounter = the moment of truth.
My prediction: Something totally anomalous will happen which will either be under-reported or, totally ignored or misrepresented. Can't wait!
And in a new paper NASA documents how it shut down ("contingency mode") it's TESS probe just when it could have gathered precise data about #3iAtlas (https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.21569)
#space #coincidence #spaceship #nhi #nhe #uap #phenomenon #astronomy

We report the detection of the nucleus of interstellar object 3I/ATLAS, using a nucleus extraction technique on Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations taken between December 2025 and January 2026. The product of the V-band geometric albedo, $p_V$, with the physical cross-section of the nucleus is $0.22 \pm 0.07$ km$^{2}$, which corresponds to an effective radius of $1.3 \pm 0.2$ km if assuming a comet-like albedo $p_{V} = 0.04$. This size is in agreement with an independent estimate based on the reported nongravitational acceleration and activity of the interstellar object. If the measured photometric variations are solely due to the rotation of an aspherical nucleus, the axis ratio must be $2:1$ or greater, and the rotation period $\gtrsim\!1$ hr. Leveraging the range of covered phase angles, we identified a significant opposition surge of $\sim\!0.2$ mag with a width of $3^{\circ} \pm 1^{\circ}$, which may include concurrent contributions from orbital plane crossing and tail projection, and determined a linear phase slope of $0.026 \pm 0.006$ mag degree$^{-1}$ for the coma dust. Compared to the preperihelion brightening trend, 3I faded more rapidly on the outbound leg, following an activity index of $4.5 \pm 0.3$, not unusual in the context of solar system comets. This activity asymmetry is further corroborated by a postperihelion coma surface brightness profile that is significantly shallower than its preperihelion counterpart. From discovery statistics, we infer that multiple interstellar objects resembling 3I probably went undetected prior to the discovery of 1I/`Oumuamua, unless the overall population possesses a steep size distribution.