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Calar Alto Colloquium 2007 |
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All the information on the 2007 Calar Alto Colloquium can be found here. Looking forward to see you in Heidelberg in May.
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Lunar Eclipse from Calar Alto |
 During
the night from the 3rd to the 4th of March 2007, a total lunar eclipse
was visible in excellent conditions from Europe and Africa. This
impressive celestial phenomenon was followed and photographed from
Calar Alto Observatory. A short movie was assembled with the images and is now available.
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Double sun sunset no longer science fiction |
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Imagine
you are living on a planet belonging to a double star system. When the
first star is descending below the horizon, the other one keeps on
shining brightly in the evening sky. Also double sunrises and sunsets
are possible when the separation between both stars is relatively small
on the sky. For a long time, this scenario belonged to science fiction only, but today we already know some worlds where one could indeed observe this fascinating celestial spectacle...
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ALHAMBRA: the history of the Universe, at sight |
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A team of researchers from institutes all over the world and led by Mariano Moles (Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía, CSIC), is currently undertaking a large scale survey (the ALHAMBRA survey) at Calar Alto that will reveal 90% of the history of the Universe. The team has just made public an impressive colour image that reveals the prospects of this work...
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The Pleiades' lesser sisters |
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Open
star cluster M45, the Pleiades, is popularly known as "The Seven
Sisters". However, it is well-known that this group of young and nearby
stars is composed not by just seven stars, but by about one thousand
of them. A recent study of this cluster has discovered the faintest and
coolest known members known to date: they are the Pleiades' lesser
sisters, a group
of the low-mass objects known as brown dwarfs...
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