NASA Detects Pulsating Core as Satellites Fail Worldwide. Scientists Fear the Object Is Moving With Intent.**

In an emergency livestream watched by more than 200 million people in the first hour, Elon Musk appeared on screen with an expression the world had never seen from him — not excitement, not confidence, but fear.

He spoke just nine words:

“3I/ATLAS has evolved — and I think it’s alive.”

Those words have since ricocheted across the globe, sending governments, scientific communities, and millions of ordinary people into a spiral of confusion and dread.

For months, astronomers have tracked 3I/ATLAS — the third interstellar object ever detected entering our solar system, after ‘Oumuamua and Borisov. But overnight, new NASA data revealed something that defies physics:

The object’s core is pulsating.
And the beating is accelerating.

A Pulse Measured Across Space

NASA confirmed at 4:12 a.m. EST that instruments from both the Deep Space Network and the James Webb Space Telescope detected rhythmic bursts of energy coming from inside 3I/ATLAS — at perfect intervals.

“Cosmic bodies do not behave like this,” said Dr. Noelle Farnsworth, a senior astrophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. “This isn’t geological. This isn’t gravitational. This is something we’ve never seen before.”

The energy readings show a rising cadence resembling a biological pulse — starting at 0.02 Hz two days ago and now climbing to 0.11 Hz. In simpler terms:

The object is “beating” faster.

 

And whatever is happening inside it is growing.

Satellite Failures Begin Worldwide

Within hours of the pulse intensifying, the first signs of global disruption began.

Japan reported abrupt outages in its weather satellite Himawari-9.

Starlink ground stations showed data desynchronization for a full 32 minutes.

Two European navigation satellites slipped partially offline.

U.S. military communications detected “foreign interference” — not from any nation, but from deep space.