Kaufmanis Public Lecture

Karlis Kaufmanis Banner

In July 2025, a telescope in Chile detected an incoming object known as 3I/ATLAS. This small comet likely formed more than seven billion years ago—before the Sun—in a star system in a very different part of the galaxy that we find ourselves in, and is only the third known interstellar object to pass through our solar system. 

In this talk, Chris Lincott explores what these enigmatic objects can tell us and how they might have influenced the Earth’s formation, place them in the context of what we’re learning from the small bodies of the solar system, including the latest results from the OSIRIS-REx mission to the near-Earth-threatening asteroid Bennu. The results taken together suggest a much more dynamic, and even chaotic, history for the solar system than many would have expected. With the Vera Rubin Observatory expected to discover 3-5 million asteroids in the next few years, we stand on the cusp of a revolution in what we know about our cosmic neighborhood—and the interstellar objects that visit it.


For more information and registration

Category
Start date
Thursday, July 16, 2026, 7 p.m.
Location

Coffman Union Theater 
300 Washington Ave SE, 
Minneapolis, MN 55455

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