KEY POINTS
  • Scientists in Hawaii have detected "Oumuamua," an object entering our solar system from the outside.
  • This has likely occurred before, but we've never had the capability of detecting it from earth.
  • Some experts say the possibility that it could have been deliberately sent by another life form cannot be ruled out.
Rendering of Oumuamua

For the first time in history, scientists have detected the first interstellar object ever observed.

In October 2017, an elongated interstellar object named "Oumuamua" — the first to enter the solar system — was detected by a survey telescope in Hawaii. A new study published this week in the Astronomical Journal, coauthored by scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, uncovered new information that suggested there was a limit to how big Oumuamua actually is, and gave astronomers a better indication of its size.