ESO Timeline

This timeline shows highlights and important events in the history of ESO. An original aim of ESO was to allow the member states to work together to build and operate advanced astronomical facilities which were beyond the capabilities of individual countries. In particular, it would allow European astronomers access to the parts of the sky best visible from the southern hemisphere, such as the centre of our own Milky Way, or our neighbour 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 [...]"

1950-1959
1. 21 June 1953 — A shared European Observatory is discussed for the first time at the Groningen conference in the Netherlands
2. 26 January 1954 — ESO declaration by leading astronomers from six European countries expressing the wish that a joint European observatory be established in the southern hemisphere  
3. 1955 — Site testing begins in South Africa and South America, to identify the best location for the ESO observatory
1960-1969
4. 05 October 1962 — Belgium, Germany, France, the Netherlands and Sweden sign the ESO convention  
5. 01 November 1962 — Otto Heckmann becomes the first Director General of ESO  
6. 15 November 1963 — Chile in South America is chosen as the site for the ESO observatory
7. 17 January 1964 — the ESO Declaration is ratified, providing the financial backing of each member state  
8. October 1964 — Acquisition of the La Silla Mountain  
9. March 1966 — Dedication ceremony for the road to the summit of La Silla  
10. 1966 — First Light for the 1-m ESO telescope at La Silla  
11. 1967 — Denmark joins ESO (member state no. 6)  
12 1967 — Construction of ESO Headquarters in Santiago, Chile begins
13. 1968 — First Light for the Grand Prisme Objectif telescope  
14. 1968 — First Light for the 1.52-m ESO telescope  
15. 1969 — First Light for the 0.5-m Danish telescope  
16 25 March 1969 — Inauguration of the ESO site at La Silla by the President of the Republic of Chile, Eduardo Frei Montalva.
1970-1979
17. 1970 — Adriaan Blaauw takes over as Director General of ESO  
18. 1970 — ESO’s Telescope Division is the first ESO department to move into offices on the CERN premises in Geneva  
19. 1971 — First Light for the 0.5-m ESO telescope  
20 1972 — First Light for the 1-m Schmidt telescope  
21. 1972 — First Light for the 0.6-m Bochum telescope  
22. 1975 — Lodewijk Woltjer takes over as Director General of ESO  
23. 1975 — First Light of the Mid-IR Kapteyn photometer on the 1-m telescope.  
24 1976 — First Light of the Near-IR photometer on the 1-m telescope.  
25 07 November 1976 — First Light for the ESO 3.6-m telescope  
26. 1979 — First Light for the 1.5-m Danish telescope  
27. 1979 — First Light for the 0.9-m Dutch telescope  
1980-1989
28. 1980 — ESO's European departments move into the new ESO Headquarters in Garching, Germany
29. 1980 — Start of operation of the Coudé Echelle Spectrometer (CES) on the 1.4-m Coudé Auxiliary Telescope (CAT)  
30 1980 — First Light of the near- and mid- infrared photometers on the 3.6-m telescope  
31. 1981 — Switzerland joins ESO (member state no. 7)  
32. 1982 — First Light of the near- and mid- infrared photometers on the 1-m telescope  
33. 24 May 1982 — Italy joins ESO (member state no. 8)  
34. 1983 — First Light for the 2.2-m Max Planck Society (MPG)/ESO Telescope  
36. March 1984 —The Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility — the European home for Hubble — opens within ESO as a collaboration with the European Space Agency.  
37. 1984 — Start of operation of the Cassegrain Echelle Spectrograph (CASPEC) at the ESO 3.6-m telescope  
38. November 1984 — First Light of the F/35 chopping secondary system and the infrared photometers on the 3.6-m telescope  
39. October 1985 — First Light of the Lyon Specklegraph on the 3.6-m telescope  
40. November 1985 — First Light of IRSPEC on the 3.6-m telescope  
41. 1987 — First Light for the 15-m Swedish-ESO Sub-millimetre Telescope (SEST)  
42. March 1987 — First Light of the F/35 photometers with MPIA on the 2.2-m telescope  
43. 01 December 1987 — Decision is taken by the ESO Council to build the Very Large Telescope (VLT)
44. 1988 — Harry van der Laan takes over as Director General of ESO  
45. July 1988 — First Light of IRAC on the 2.2-m telescope  
46. 23 March 1989 — First light of the New Technology Telescope (NTT)
47. 11 May 1989 — First Light of the second ESO Faint Object Spectrograph and Camera (EFOSC2) instrument on the NTT telescope.  
1990-1999
48. April 1990 — First Light of the COME-ON Instrument on the 3.6-m ESO telescope  
49. November 1990 — Start of operation of the ESO Multi-Mode Instrument (EMMI) on the NTT  
50. 01 December 1990 — Paranal site selected for the VLT
51. May 1992 — First Light of the IRAC instrument on the 2.2-m telescope  
52. July 1992 — First Light of the Thermal Infrared MultiMode Instrument (TIMMI) on the 3.6-m ESO telescope  
53. December 1992 — First Light of the COME-ON+ instrument on the 3.6-m telescope  
54. 1992 — Riccardo Giacconi takes over as Director General of ESO  
55. 1995 — Site testing for the future Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) takes place in Chile together with National Radio Astronomy Observatory and National Astronomical Observatory of Japan
56. 18 April 1995 — New agreement between Chilean Government and ESO  
57. 05 September 1996 — The Chilean Senate ratifies the new agreement with ESO  
58. 01 December 1996 — Paranal Foundation Ceremony  
59. 06 December 1997 — First Light for the Son OF ISAAC instrument (SOFI) on the NTT  
60. 1998 — First Light for the 1.2-m Swiss Euler telescope at La Silla  
61. February 1998 — First Light for the second Superb-Seeing Imager (SuSI2) on the NTT  
62. 25 May 1998 — First light for the VLT’s first Unit Telescope (UT1), Antu  
63. 15 September 1998 — First Light for the first visual and near UV FOcal Reducer and low dispersion Spectrograph (FORS1) on the VLT’s UT1, Antu           
64. 06 October 1998 — First Light of the Fiber-fed Extended Range Optical Spectrograph (FEROS) on the ESO 1.52-m telescope  
65. 16 November 1998 — First Light of the Infrared Spectrometer And Array Camera (ISAAC) instrument on VLT UT1, Antu  
66. 15 January 1999 — First Light with the 67-Million-Pixel Wide Field Imager (WFI) Camera on the 2.2-m telescope  
67. 01 March 1999 — First Light for the VLT’s second Unit Telescope (UT2), Kueyen  
68. 05 March 1999 — Official inauguration of Paranal Observatory  
69. April 1999 — Start of regular science operations at Paranal  
70. 1 September 1999 — Catherine Cesarsky takes over as Director General of ESO
71. 27 September 1999 — First light for the Ultraviolet Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES) on VLT’s UT2, Kueyen  
72. 29 October 1999 — First light for the second visual and near UV FOcal Reducer and low dispersion Spectrograph (FORS2) at VLT’s UT2, Kueyen  
2000-2009
73. 27 June 2000 — Portugal joins ESO (member state no. 9)
74. 26 January 2000 — First Light for the VLT’s third Unit Telescope (UT3), Melipal  
75. 04 September 2000 — First Light for the VLT’s fourth Unit Telescope (UT4), Yepun  
76. October 2000 — First Light of the second Thermal Infrared MultiMode Instrument (TIMMI2) on the 3.6-m telescope  
77. 17 March 2001 - First Light for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI)  
78. April 2001 — Resolution for the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) between Europe, North America and Japan
 
79. 25 November 2001 — First Light for the combined NAOS-CONICA instrument (NACO) on VLT’s UT4 Yepun  
80. 26 February 2002 — First light of the VIsible Multi-Object Spectrograph (VIMOS) on the VLT’s UT3, Melipal
81. 01 July 2002 — the United Kingdom joins ESO (member state no. 10)
 
82. 24 October 2002 — First Light of the Fibre-fed Extended Range Optical Spectrograph (FEROS) on the 2.2-m telescope  
83. 15 December 2002 — First Light of the MID-infrared Interferometric instrument (MIDI) on the VLTI  
84. February 2003 — First light of the Fibre Large Array Multi Element Spectrograph (FLAMES) on VLT’s UT2, Kueyen  
85. February 2003 — ESO and the US National Science Foundation sign a Bilateral Agreement on the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA)  
86. 11 February 2003 — First Light of the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS) at ESO’s 3.6-m telescope at the La Silla Observatory
87. 18 April 2003 — First Light of the MACAO-VLTI facility  
88. November 2003 — Groundbreaking ceremony at the site of Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA)  
89. 30 January 2004 — First Light for the first Auxiliary Telescope (AT1)  
90. March 2004 — First fringes of the Astronomical Multi-BEam combineR (AMBER) on the VLTI  
91. 30 April 2004 — First Light for the VLT Imager and Spectrometer in the InfraRed (VISIR) on VLT’s UT3, Melipal  
92. 01 July 2004 — Finland joins ESO (member state no. 11)  
93. 09 July 2004 — First Light for the Spectrograph for INtegral Field Observation in the Near-Infrared (SINFONI) on the VLT’s UT4, Yepun
94. September 2004 — Agreement is reached between ESO, NSF and NINS, concerning the construction of the Atacama Large Millimeter / submillimeter Array (ALMA)  
95. 02 February 2005 — First Light for the second Auxiliary Telescope (AT2)  
96. July 2005 — First Light for the sub-millimetre Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX)
97. 01 November 2005 — First Light for the third Auxiliary Telescope (AT3)  
98. December 2005 — ESO signs the European contract for the production of up to 32 ALMA antennas. This is the largest ever contract for industrial work on a ground-based astronomy project.  
99. 28 January 2006 — First Light of the VLT Laser Guide Star, on the VLT’s UT4, Yepun  
100. 04 June 2006 — First light for the CRyogenic high-resolution InfraRed Echelle Spectrograph (CRIRES) at VLT’s UT1  
101. 01 July 2006 — Spain joins ESO (member state no. 12)  
102. 11 December 2006 — ESO Council agree to proceed with studies for the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT)
103. 15 December 2006 — First Light for the fourth Auxiliary Telescope (AT4)  
104. 01 January 2007 — Czech Republic joins ESO (member state no. 13)  
105. 25 March 2007 — First Light for the Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics Demonstrator (MAD) at the Visitor Focus of Melipal  
106. 06 July 2007 — First Light of the Gamma-Ray burst Optical/Near-infrared Detector (GROND) on the 2.2-m telescope  
107. August 2007 — First Light for the LArge BOlometer CAmera (LABOCA) instrument on APEX  
108. 22 August 2007 — First Light for the High Acuity, Wide field K-band Imaging (HAWK-I) instrument on VLT’s UT4, Yepun  
109. 01 September 2007 — Tim de Zeeuw takes over as Director General of ESO  
110. 01 July 2008 — Austria joins ESO (member state no. 14)
111. 08 September 2008 — First Light for the Phase Referenced Imaging and Microarcsecond Astrometry (PRIMA) instrument on the VLTI  
112. 06 October 2008 — First Light for the Submillimeter APEX Bolometer Camera (SABOCA) instrument on APEX  
113. November 2008 — First Light for X-shooter on the VLT  
114. December 2008 — ALMA observatory is equipped with its first antenna  
115. 06 May 2009 — The first two ALMA antennas are successfully linked
116. 20 November 2009 — Phase Closure of ALMA (3 antennas)
     
     
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