Announcement

ESOcast 132: Why Astronomers Want to Use ALMA — We are Stardust!

12 October 2017

How can we find out more about the origins of life on Earth? Well, we can leave Earth behind and instead look out into the Universe. The atoms that make up our bodies can only be made in the high pressure and high temperature environments of stars. When stars end their lives, sometimes in spectacular supernova explosions, the atoms that they made within them are spread across space where they form the next generation of stars and planets. In the clouds from which stars and planets form, the atoms bond together to form molecules.

ESOcast 132 describes how ALMA can be used to observe many different molecules throughout the farthest reaches of the Universe, including some that are needed for life, .

You can subscribe to the ESOcasts on iTunes, receive future episodes on YouTube or follow us on Vimeo.

Many other ESOcast episodes are also available.

Find out how to view and contribute subtitles to the ESOcast in multiple languages, or translate this video on YouTube.

Links

Contacts

Richard Hook
ESO Public Information Officer
Garching bei München, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6655
Cell: +49 151 1537 3591
Email: rhook@eso.org

About the Announcement

Id:ann17072

Images

Screenshot of ESOcast 132
Screenshot of ESOcast 132

Videos

ESOcast 132: Why​ ​Astronomers​ ​Want​ ​to Use​ ​ALMA​ ​-​ ​We​ ​are​ ​Stardust!
ESOcast 132: Why​ ​Astronomers​ ​Want​ ​to Use​ ​ALMA​ ​-​ ​We​ ​are​ ​Stardust!