Science & technology | A flying visit

An interstellar object is cruising through the solar system

Its appearance puts a new branch of astronomy to the test

El Sauce Observatory , Chile under the night sky.
Photograph: Obstech/El Sauce Observatory
|4 min read

ON THE NIGHT of July 1st, in a remote corner of Chile, a small robotic telescope noticed something moving in the sky. What at first seemed a routine detection of an object travelling through the solar system soon turned out to be anything but. The object’s trajectory revealed it to be a much rarer visitor than first thought. Formed around a distant star elsewhere in the Milky Way, it is an interstellar wanderer, not a merely interplanetary one.

Explore more

Illustration of a person in a lab coat examining into the needle of an oversized syringe.

RFK junior wants to ban an ingredient in vaccines. Is he right?

Studies show that thimerosal does more good than harm

A plant using photosynthesis to create new proteins.

AI is helping to design proteins from scratch

They could treat diseases, test drugs and boost crop yields


A pen made of a DNA strand.

A new project aims to synthesise a human chromosome

The tools developed along the way could revolutionise medicine


How sea slugs give themselves superpowers

Their slimy shenanigans might have applications for humans, too

Is being bilingual good for your brain?

Perhaps. Learning languages offers other, more concrete benefits

Distrust in public-health institutions is not just an American problem

Across the rich world politics is driving scepticism