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Susan Desoto's avatar

Could 3I/Atlas have been ejected from our galaxys black hole? While there could this object have been subjected to material interactions we consider rare? Could this explain the speed and composition of this object.

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Peter Pham's avatar

From my understanding, 3I/ATLAS is the fastest-moving object ever observed in our solar system — on the order of ~26–30 km/s relative to the Sun (65,000+ mph).

But what matters is that this kind of trajectory isn’t random — the speed and composition are fingerprints of a concentrated causal event. Whether it’s a black hole, a stellar ejection, or another interstellar mechanism, the principle holds: resolution comes not from diffuse variance, but from one rare burst of causality that changes the object’s path forever.

Whether in astrophysics or markets, resolution comes not from scatter but from rare bursts of causality that change the path forever.

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