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Executive producer: Lars Lindberg Christensen.ħ de Enero de 2011: Articles include an overview of how Disney Television Italy worked alongside the Education and Public Outreach office of the INAF Astronomical Observatory of Padua in Italy to help promote astronomy to children. Footage and photos: ESO, Mineworks, Stéphane Guisard (and José Francisco Salgado (). Web and technical support: Lars Holm Nielsen and Raquel Yumi Shida. Visual design and editing: Martin Kornmesser and Luis Calçada. More episodes of the ESOcast are also available. In this episode of the ESOcast, we follow three staff members in a unique behind-the-scenes look at the Paranal Residencia at the observatory’s base camp - a remarkable hotel that has won architectural design awards - to see some of their leisure activities. ġ de Febrero de 2011: The barren landscape surrounding the Paranal Observatory in Chile is stunning, but for the ESO staff who work there, on-site recreational activities are important for entertainment and general wellbeing. The Girls’ Day visitors will be able to talk with an ESO astronomer working 11 000 km away on this 2600-metre mountaintop in Chile’s Atacama Desert. To complete this introduction to the world’s most productive astronomical observatory, there will be a live video-link to Cerro Paranal, home of ESO’s Very Large Telescope. The topics covered include astronomy and engineering, administration and human resources.
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The ESO Girls’ Day, An Introduction to the Work of the European Southern Observatory, presents a series of talks in German and question-and-answer sessions with ESO staff and students. ġ4 de Marzo de 2011: Deutsche Version unten On 14 April 2011, ESO will participate in Germany’s nationwide Girls’ Day activities, in which technical enterprises, universities and research organisations arrange open days for girls, to give female school students an insight into science and technology professions and to encourage more of them to choose such careers in the future.
Science in School is published by EIROforum, a collaboration between eight European intergovernmental scientific research organisations.
ESO contributions in this issue include news about the first super-Earth atmosphere being analysed by astronomers using ESO telescopes, and an account of a student winning an ESO prize in the European Union Contest for Young Scientists, which took him on the trip of a lifetime to the Very Large Telescope on Cerro Paranal in Chile. This issue features cutting-edge science news, teaching activities, science education projects, events, and much more besides. The journal promotes inspiring science teaching by encouraging communication between teachers, scientists and everyone else involved in European science education, and every issue is jam-packed with informative articles. Issue 18 marks five years since Science in School was launched in March 2006. Ĩ de Abril de 2011: The latest issue of Science in School, the European journal for science teachers, is now available online and in print. More information Credit: ESO Visual design and editing: Martin Kornmesser and Luis Calçada.Editing: Herbert Zodet.Web and technical support: Lars Holm Nielsen and Raquel Yumi Shida.Written by: Oana Sandu, Sarah Reed, Olivier Hainaut and Herbert Zodet.Narration: Dr. Watch more podcast episodes of the ESOcast. And yet, an amateur astrophotographer from Russia managed to uncover a real gem from ESO’s Hidden Treasures, winning a trip to Chile to observe with the Very Large Telescope and take part in the observations.How did he manage it? And could you do the same? This podcast episode takes you behind the scenes of ESO’s Hidden Treasures competition and shows you how a group of determined and talented amateur astrophotographers managed to find and produce stunning astronomy pictures.
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19 de Abril de 2011: The observations from ESO’s powerful ground-based telescopes are veritable treasures, stored in a huge archive usually only visited by professional astronomers on a mission.