Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy website MUSE: New Free Film about ESO’s Cosmic Time Machine
may 11, 2017 - e.s.o.

MUSE: New Free Film about ESO’s Cosmic Time Machine

CNRS Images, in partnership with #eso, has produced a documentary about MUSE, the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer. Directed by Christophe Gombert and Claude Delhaye, MUSE, The Cosmic Time Machine takes a detailed look at one of the latest — and in fact, the biggest — second-generation instruments installed on Yepun (UT4), the fourth Unit Telescope of ESO’s Very Large Telescope at the Paranal Observatory in Chile.

The 35-minute documentary explores the inspiration and the story behind MUSE, why it was needed, and how it came into life over a nine year development phase. It highlights the international European cooperation necessary to realise the project, as well as the participation of many of the hundreds of researchers, technicians and engineers involved. The innovative technology of MUSE and the front-line science performed with it are also discussed, braided with a gripping storyline of the delicate installation process leading up to the moment of first light of the instrument.

MUSE, a novel state-of-the-art integral field spectrograph, is one of the most ambitious astronomical projects of our time. It saw first light in January 2014 (eso1407) and uses 24 3D spectrographs, obtaining spectra over wide areas of the sky and at a large range of wavelengths, from blue to infrared. Each of the 24 data “cubes” produced by MUSE in one observation is so rich in information that researchers need many months to fully analyse its contents and publish the results.

With instruments like MUSE, employing cutting-edge technology, #eso remains at the forefront of astronomical research. Since MUSE’s conception, astronomers have been able to study the Universe in more detail than ever before. In fact, there is no instrument currently available that is better suited to observing the faintest galaxies in the very distant Universe, and it will undoubtedly produce results of outstanding quality in the next decades.

The film project was led by Roland Bacon, Principal Investigator of the MUSE project, and premiered in France on 9 March 2017 at the Musée des Confluences. Now, the movie is released under a Creative Commons NoDerivatives license through ESO's video archive.

Related news

march 27, 2024
january 10, 2024
july 11, 2023

A new image from the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) collaboration has uncovered strong and organised magnetic fields spiraling from...

Astronomers have found a direct link between the explosive deaths of massive stars and the formation of the most compact and enigm...

The European Southern Observatory’s Extremely Large Telescope (ESO’s ELT) is a revolutionary ground-based telescope that will have...

You might be interested in

june 27, 2023
may 03, 2023
april 27, 2023

This cloud of orange and red, part of the Sh2-284 nebula, is shown here in spectacular detail using data from the VLT Survey Teles...

Using ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), researchers have found for the first time the fingerprints left by the explosion of the fi...

For the first time, astronomers have observed, in the same image, the shadow of the black hole at the centre of the galaxy Messier...