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ESO Timeline

This timeline shows highlights and important events in the history of ESO. One of ESO’s original aims was to allow the Member States to work together to build and operate advanced astronomical facilities that were beyond the capabilities of any individual country. In particular, it would allow European astronomers to access the parts of the sky best visible from the southern hemisphere, such as the centre of the Milky Way, or our neighbouring galaxies, the Magellanic Clouds.

An excerpt from the preamble to the ESO Convention of 1962 reads "The Governments of the States parties to this convention [...] desirous of jointly creating an observatory equipped with powerful instruments in the Southern Hemisphere and accordingly promoting and organising co-operation in astronomical research [...]". 

  1. 11 February 2020 — ESO signs agreement with UN Women.
  2. 6 October 2020 — 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics awarded for research with ESO telescopes on Milky Way's supermassive black hole.
  3. 4 December 2020 — Funding boost for ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope.
  4. 1 February 2021 — CRIRES+ sees first light.
  5. 27 April 2021 — Test-Bed Telescope 2: New telescope at ESO’s La Silla joins effort to protect Earth from risky asteroids.
  6. 6 July 2021 — First light for CONCERTO.
  7. 1 October 2021 — ALMA celebrates 10 years of science.
  8. 29 October 2021 — 20 years of the VLTI.
  9. 12 November 2021 — ESO adopts new measures to improve its environmental sustainability.
  10. 15 December 2021 — ESO and Chile sign agreement to foster scientific and technological cooperation on the ELT.
  11. 10 February 2022 — ESO and Australia strengthen their strategic partnership.
  12. 12 May 2022 — First image of the black hole at the heart of our galaxy.
  13. 27 June 2022 — A new planet hunter awakens: NIRPS instrument sees first light.
  14. 5 October 2022 (ESO 60th anniversary) — ESO images a wondrous star factory to mark 60 years of collaboration.
  15. 23 November 2022 — Sharper infrared eyes for the VLT: ERIS sees first light.
  16. 13 March 2023 — ALMA and its Partners Celebrate 10 Years of Groundbreaking Science.
  17. 16 May 2023 — BlackGEM telescopes begin hunt for gravitational-wave sources at ESO's La Silla Observatory.
  18. 25 May 2023 — 25 Years of Fantastic Science and Engineering with ESO’s Very Large Telescope.
  19. 11 July 2023 — ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope is now half completed.
  20. 12 October 2023 — ESO and Chile celebrate 60 years of collaboration in astronomy.
  21. 15 November 2023 — ALMA achieves its highest resolution observations.
  22. 18 December 2023 — First segments of the world's largest telescope mirror shipped to Chile.
  23. 14 November 2024 — Expanding Horizons: crowdsourcing to shape the next ESO programme.