James Webb Space Telescope posted a photo:

Comets and cosmic perspective
Getting the opportunity to study a comet from outside our solar system is like getting to study an artifact from an ancient culture. It gives you direct insight into that distant time and place but also allows for comparison to your own. Webb’s observations of the composition of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS is showing how unusual our own solar system might be.
The data on the composition of 3I/ATLAS imply that it might have originated in a very cold stellar system, and from much earlier in the history of our galaxy. In fact, this comet could have formed as long ago as 10-12 billion years, during the universe’s “cosmic noon,” when star formation was at its height. It’s possible the system it originated in was within a relatively cold, dense cloud, and the comet was ejected as it aged and warmed up.
There’s only one planet we know of with life - our own. Getting to study objects that formed in a different system than our own is a rare opportunity for learning how common, or uncommon, the conditions are for the evolution of life elsewhere in the universe.
This image: The NIRSpec (Near-Infrared Spectrograph) instrument on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope can map specific chemical and molecular signatures, as seen here in its three images of comet 3I/ATLAS, each highlighting a part of the comet’s contents.
Researchers use NIRSpec’s Integral Field Unit, which provides a spectrum of every image pixel, to dive deeper into the details of cosmic objects than they can with the telescope’s imaging instruments alone. This is crucial for a rare object like 3I/ATLAS, which is only the third comet from outside the solar system ever studied, and the first to be observed by an instrument capable of capturing as much detail as NIRSpec. With NIRSpec’s data, researchers can build a picture of where the comet may have come from and what its home system was like and then compare that to familiar conditions in the solar system.
Read more: science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-finds-clues-to-...
Image Credit: Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Martin Cordiner (CUA, NASA-GSFC); Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)
Image Description: Comparison of three telescope images side by side. They are roughly spherical but pixelated, with more intense color saturation in the center. From left to right: smallest sphere is blue and labeled H2O, orange is larger and labeled CO2, and red is largest and labeled CO. A scale bar at the lower left is labeled 1300 km/1 arcsecond and is about one fourth of each of the three images. A compass at the lower right shows north pointing up to 12 o’clock, east pointing left to 9 o’clock, and a fainter arrow labeled to Sun pointing down to 8 o’clock.