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Release

ESO 48/06 - Associated Images

20 December 2006
For Immediate Release

It Is Too Early To Be Santa's Sleigh, Isn't It?

Flying Object Finally Identified

ESO PR Photo 48a/06

ESO PR Photo 48a/06

An Unexpected Streak in a MASCOT image


ESO PR Photo 48c/06

The Complete Path of the Object

See the whole sequence of images HERE!.

Or watch the movies:

[GIF: 2.8M]
[Quicktime: 2.6M]

From Cerro Pachon (credit: Night Sky Live):

[GIF: 4.4M]


An unusual object was found on MASCOT images in the morning of 18 December 2006. The image above shows one of the first images where the object appears as a bright streak. The whole sequence, seen above but also available as individual images or as an animated gif or quicktime movie, shows how the object then takes the shape of a cloud that vanishes. The same sequence, observed from Cerro Pachon, can also be seen. The images clearly show the Milky Way spreading out above Paranal and the Large Magellanic Cloud, one of the Milky Way's satellite, in the lower middle part. A few prominent constellations, among which Orion, are also recognisable.

Here is a list of some other interesting features seen in these images:

  • In one frame close to the end of the sequence, a meteor shoots parallel to the Milky Way in the south-east quadrant
  • The sky is getting bright towards the eastern horizon due to the moon about to rise.
  • Harder to see, but also in that region is the zodiacal light coming up. The sequence was taken 07:00 to 08:00 GMT, and the astronomical night ended at 08:19
  • The constant "flickering" of the sky is the varying near-infrared OH sky emission. The camera sensitivity goes farther into the red than the human eye.
  • A few lonely clouds are seen passing as dark spots, e.g. in the north-western horizon, or towards the bright eastern horizon.
  • The Yepun (UT4) dome is seen turning and opening and closing its ventilation louvers to control the microclimate in the dome and keep turbulence low, thereby increasing image quality.
  • The closed dome, still empty, is to host soon the VLT Survey Telescope.
  • The steel tower is part of the meteorological site monitor equipment.


ESO PR Photo 48b/06

ESO PR Photo 48b/06

Meteor in a MASCOT image



Another image extracted from the MASCOT sequence obtained in the morning of 18 December 2006. A meteor is clearly visible as a faint trace in the middle right.