Hello again,
I think, I should tell you a bit about La Silla, the observatory I am at during these days. It was the first observatory that ESO built in Chile. The more modern and bigger one is at Paranal where I usually work, and I will tell you about it later for sure. But it’s nice to be back on La Silla again; I did my fellowship here a few years ago. The whole mountain is full of little telscopes, as you might have seen on the picture of the previous post. Still, most of these telescopes are no longer operated. ESO itself keeps three telescopes running, and there are a couple of more operated by some European countries or institutes. Sometimes it’s a bit sad if you see all these dead telescopes especially if you remember the lively times before. Well, they still make for a nice scenery, I guess.

The 3.6-m telescope at La Silla
So now, as astronomers from ESO member states, we have access to three telescopes: the 2.2-m telescope with a wide field imager and a high resolution spectrograph, the 3.6-m telescope with HARPS, an extremely stable high resolution spectrograph which was built specifically to find planets, and has successfully done so several times, and the New Technology Telescope (NTT) at which I am observing tonight. The “New Technology” refers to the technology status of the 80s, when this telescope was built. It was the first ESO telescope where the main mirror was deformable and could always be put in optimum shape to get the best image quality for any position. This is a technique called “active optics” , which was pioneered by the NTT. Also the enclosure had a revolutionary design, as you can see on the picture below. Both, telescope and enclosure design where then adapted for the large telescopes at Paranal. the NTT, although it is getting old, is still a nice telescope to work with. And it has two good instruments, the infrared camera SOFI and EFOSC, the optical imager and spectrograph that I am using this time. I will tell you in some later posts about the science that I am working on, really cool stuff

The NTT at la Silla
But there are not only telescopes here. La Silla is situated at the southern edge of the Atacama desert, which is considered the driest desert on earth. However, since it’s only on the border, there is still some green around here, and every few years, when the winter was especially humid, we have the spectacular phenomenon of the ‘blooming desert’. Then you have little purple flowers all over the place and all the mountains around are covered in green grass. This happened also this year, that’s where the green patches come from that you can still see on the photos.
And we have animals here. Insects, scorpions and spiders, but also birds, viscachas (a kind of chinchillas), and a family of foxes is living here. The foxes are half tame because all the astronomers who come here want to feed them. I put a picture of a fox that I took the last time I have been here. Cute, isn’t it? I haven’t seen any foxes so far this time, I hope they are not gone, but maybe they have young ones at the moment and are thus more shy. Btw. did you know that foxes actually love grapes? I used to laugh at this story by Aesop ‘The fox and the grapes’ , but it is true. They are mad after grapes! It’s the only food they actually take out of your hands

The fox we called Federico.
Apart from these originally wild animals, there are also two dogs which belong to the observatory and sometimes a bunch of half-wild donkeys that belong to a family living a kind of nomade life close by in the desert. These donkeys are scary. Imagine driving in the middle of the night without lights (or only very dim light) because you don’t want to disturb the ongoing observations. Suddenly, you find yourself in the middle of a herd of donkeys. There have been some crashes already, the cars then get marked with a little donkey on the side (astronomers have a strange sense of humour, I guess).
For lovers of archeology, there are some petroglyphs found in the valley next to the telescopes. They make for a nice walk of 2-3h. I have done it several times, and it’s very pleasant as long as you take enough water with you.

Not too serious tools for the observation.
Of course, at La Silla, as at every observatory, there are not only astronomers working. In fact, the astronomers are a minority. There are technicians and engineers for software, mechanics, eletronics, …, people who handle the huge data transfer, cooks and people who clean the place, a paramedic, and people working in administration. And we have several possibilites to pass any leisure time. We have a gym, a table tennis, pool billiard, a library, even a small cinema and a good movie collection. And every now and then someone comes up with a crazy idea, like the new meteorolgy station or the already classic time server. You see, we have quite some fun here
And of course, we have a beautiful sky here. Watching the night sky, especially when it’s dark and no moon shining, is one of the best experiences you can imagine. It always reminds me of one of Walt Whitmans poems :
When I heard the learn’d astronomer;
When the proofs, the figures, were ranged in columns before me;
When I was shown the charts and the diagrams, to add, divide, and measure them;
When I, sitting, heard the astronomer, where he lectured with much applause in the lecture-room,
How soon, unaccountable, I became tired and sick;
Till rising and gliding out, I wander’d off by myself,
In the mystical moist night-air, and from time to time,
Look’d up in perfect silence at the stars.
Well, what can I say as final words: La Silla is a magic place and I am always happy to be back!
.