Astronomer’s Paradise is the first episode of a Atacama Starry Nights timelapse movie series in which filmmakers illuminate the wonders of Cerro Paranal with exquisite definition, revealing the dance of stars across a clear night sky.
Cerro Paranal is an astronomers paradise with its stunningly dark, steady and transparent sky. Located in the barren Atacama Desert of Chile it is home to some of the world’s leading telescopes.
Operated by the European Southern Observatory the Very Large Telescope (VLT) is located on the Paranal mountain, composed of four 8 m telescopes which can combine their light to make a giant telescope by interferometry. Four smaller auxiliary telescopes, each 1.8 m in aperture, are important elements of the VLT interferometer.
Paranal was selected for cutting edge astronomical observations also because of the sky transparency and steady atmospheric condition which let astronomers peer into tiny details in the deep cosmos using giant telescopes.
This film is made with footage from the November 2011 TWAN imaging expedition to Paranal assigned by the European Southern Observatory (ESO). Photographed 14 nights in a row usually from 05:30 pm to 08:00 a.m.
This film series is produced by Christoph Malin and Babak Tafreshi for the (The World at Night (TWAN) program), with footage inside vista-observatory contributed by Stephane Guisard.














