ESO — Reaching New Heights in Astronomy
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European
Southern
Observatory
ESO Outreach Community Newsletter
February 2018

Dear Fellow Communicators,

February can be a quiet month, but this year that’s not the case for us at ESO. Activity and excitement are building up with just 70 days left until the ESO Supernova opens. We are all working hard getting everything ready and organising a series of events to mark the opening of the centre. We will tell you more about these events in the next edition.

Meanwhile, our ESOshop has some new products to check out:

These products will be available in the ESO Supernova shop as well.

CAPjournal 23 has been released. We are happy to announce that we have handed over the publishing of CAPjournal to the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Office for Astronomy Outreach (OAO). After more than 10 years work at ESO supporting the CAPjournal, it has moved to a new home at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ). We wish our colleagues the best of luck and lots of editions full of useful content for our community!

We’re delighted to announce that ESO has become a partner organisation of the Starmus Festival — a combination of science, art and music that has featured presentations from astronauts, cosmonauts, Nobel Prize winners and other prominent figures from science, culture, the arts and music.

Don’t forget about some of the currently open opportunities:

Last, but definitely not least, if you are a PhD Student or know someone who is, check out this video presenting the ESO Studentship programme. Applications will open soon and we encourage you not to miss the opportunity to fast-track your career at ESO. Learn more details here.

Let’s reach new heights in astronomy together!

Lars Lindberg Christensen (lars@eso.org)
Head, ESO education and Public Outreach Department (ePOD)




  ESO Announcements


ESOcast 151: Chile Chill 11– ALMA from the Air

9 February 2018: Sprawling across the Atacama Desert, 66 antennas work in unison with extraordinary precision to make the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). Together, these antennas capture images similar to what ...

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Starmus V — Star-studded Line Up for 2019

9 February 2018: Since the very first people looked up at a star-filled sky we have been awestruck by the vastness of the cosmos. Even today we remain humbled by the immensity of ...

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CAPjournal Issue 23 Now Available

9 February 2018: The 23rd issue of the Communicating Astronomy with the Public journal is out now! In this issue you will find papers on the methodology of applying experimental psychology to astronomy ...

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ESO at the Big Science Business Forum 2018

2 February 2018: Big Science is a term that encapsulates the way in which scientific progress increasingly relies on large-scale projects, often funded by national governments or groups of governments, leading to increasingly ...

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ESOcast 149: Fast Track Your Career With the ESO Studentship Programme

2 February 2018: ESO’s Studentship programme provides a valuable opportunity for astronomers of the future to gain experience at the most productive ground-based astronomical observatory in the world. PhD students work alongside ...

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AstroCamera 2018 Competition Open for Entries

1 February 2018: ESO invites you to take part in AstroCamera 2018 — an international competition in support of popularising astronomy and astrophotography. The competition is organised by the Hewelianum Centre in Gdańsk, Poland ...

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5th Photo NightScape Awards Open for Entries

29 January 2018: ESO is inviting submissions for the fifth Photo Nightscape Awards (PNA) —  an international competition for astrophotographers. As a partner in the competition, which is organised by the Chasseurs de Nuits ...

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Girls’ Day Event at ESO Headquarters in Garching, Germany

19 January 2018: On 26 April 2018, ESO will participate in Germany’s Girls’ Day activities, in which technology companies, universities and research organisations open their doors to female school students to give ...

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Catch a Star 2017 Contest Winners Announced

19 January 2018: The winners of the 2017 Catch a Star Contest have been announced. ESO is providing each of the top five places with a mounted image of a particularly fascinating astronomical ...

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  ESOblog


How to Install a Planetarium — A conversation with engineer Max Rößner about his work on the ESO Supernova

Interview with: Max Rößner

16 February 2018: Part of ESO Headquarters in Garching, Germany, is currently in a frenzy of activity as we prepare to open the ESO Supernova Planetarium & Visitor Centre in April 2018. This ...

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Understanding How Stars Die — Markus Wittkowski on using a team of telescopes to image dying stars

Interview with: Markus Wittkowski

9 February 2018: Over the centuries, astronomers have learned that stars are not just static pinpricks of light in the sky — they are dynamic and evolving objects that go through life cycles. ...

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Little Galaxies, Big Mysteries — Federico Lelli on what dwarf galaxies tell us about the cosmological model

Interview with: Federico Lelli

2 February 2018: In order to understand some of the weirdest and most wonderful phenomena in the Universe, scientists rely on the Lambda Cold Dark Matter (LCDM) model. This model assumes the existence ...

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Protecting the Earth from Cosmic Clashes — ESO’s role in the International Asteroid Warning Network

Interview with: Olivier Hainaut

Interview with: Andy Williams

26 January 2018: 65 million years ago, the most famous asteroid in history slammed into Earth and most likely exterminated the dinosaurs. Disconcertingly, we are no less likely to be to hit by ...

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Working atop Paranal — ESO's Adaptive Optics Scientist at Paranal talks about life in the desert

Interview with: Julien Milli

19 January 2018: Even in the pristine conditions of ESO’s Paranal Observatory in the high, dry Chilean desert, turbulence in the Earth’s atmosphere can distort starlight and blur astronomical observations. Astronomers are able ...

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  ESOcasts


ESOcast 152 Light: ESO’s VLT Working as 16-metre Telescope for First Time (4K UHD)

13 February 2018: The ESPRESSO instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope in Chile has used the combined light of all four of the 8.2-metre Unit Telescopes for the first time. Combining light from ...


ESOcast 151: Chile Chill 11 – ALMA from the Air

9 February 2018: The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is a state-of-the-art telescope to study light from some of the coldest objects in the Universe. The music is by Stan Dart from "Supernova", ...


ESOcast 150 Light: Planets around TRAPPIST-1 Probably Rich in Water

5 February 2018: A new study has found that the seven planets orbiting the nearby ultra-cool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1 are all made mostly of rock, and some could potentially hold more water than ...

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ESOcast 149: Fast Track Your Career with the ESO Studentship Programmes

2 February 2018: In ESOcast 149 we hear from some of ESO’s current students about their experience at ESO, and they offer their advice to those considering following in their footsteps.


ESOcast 148 Light: Clouded Star Birth (4K UHD)

31 January 2018: In the star-forming region Lupus 3, in the constellation of Scorpius (The Scorpion), dazzlingly hot stars are born from collapsing masses of gas and dust.


ESOcast 147 Light: First Light for Planet Hunter ExTrA at La Silla (4K UHD)

24 January 2018: A new national facility at ESO’s La Silla Observatory has successfully made its first observations. The ExTrA telescopes will search for and study Earth-sized planets orbiting nearby red dwarf stars. ...


ESOcast 146 Light: Odd Behaviour of Star Reveals Black Hole in Giant Star Cluster (4K UHD)

17 January 2018: Astronomers using ESO’s MUSE instrument on the Very Large Telescope in Chile have discovered a star in the cluster NGC 3201 that is behaving very strangely. It appears to be ...

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 ESO Press Releases


31 January 2018
Glory From Gloom




New on eso.org




Upcoming Events

Ongoing

26 April 2018: Girls' Day at ESO Headquarters

28 April 2018: ESO Supernova Planetarium & Visitor Centre opening

24 - 29 June 2019: Starmus V

2 July 2019: Total Solar Eclipse




Upcoming Exhibitions

26 - 28 February 2018: Big Science Business Forum. Copenhagen, Denmark.

3 - 6 April 2018: EWASS. Liverpool, United Kingdom.

20 - 31 August 2018: IAU General Assembly. Vienna, Austria.

24 - 29 June 2019: Starmus V event. Berne, Switzerland.

 
A red giant sheds its skin  Mapping a Merger  A diamond in the rough  Desert vistas 

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