News

“This wonderful machine changed the world, producing the kind of ‘transformational science’ it was designed for”

“This wonderful machine changed the world, producing the kind of ‘transformational science’ it was designed for”

It was no ordinary stone. That monolith in Chajnantor was engraved with some kind of moons that looked like an observatory, and it said "ALMA - AOS Technical Building". It was September 2006, and Giorgio Siringo -who had arrived two years earlier to put "eyes" on the APEX radio telescope from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in...

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Unforgettable celebrations of these first 10 years

Unforgettable celebrations of these first 10 years

During March we celebrated our first decade of ALMA operations. Thus, the OSF and AOS became the first venues for celebrations recognizing our immense work over the last 10 years to enable astronomical research worldwide. Click on the pictures to relive the celebrations!We will keep updating the gallery with more...

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“I have seen ALMA grow from a project to an observatory”

“I have seen ALMA grow from a project to an observatory”

That day, all expectations were set at the port of Antofagasta. The first ALMA antenna had finally arrived in our hands and it was necessary to accompany its transfer to the Vertex hangar at OSF. The television and print media of that October 2007 were in charge of recording that milestone that, almost 16 years later, Héctor Ceballos, our...

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A new face at ALMA: meet Catalina Margulis

A new face at ALMA: meet Catalina Margulis

It was like any other summer day at the beach. The family was having lunch in their apartment, in a dining room overlooking the terrace. They began to talk about the universe, and as the minutes passed, about the existence of aliens and UFOs that could be living among us. Catalina was only ten years old and does not...

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The guardians of the network

The guardians of the network

It has been almost four months since we suffered a cyber-attack on our computer system. An emergency that has undoubtedly had an impact on our operations. However, we have now recovered from that event. After 48 days of hard work by our IT team, on December 19 we resumed our astronomical observations. And more recently, on January 26 it...

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