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INAF Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera
INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera
  • About
    • About us
    • How to reach us in Milan
    • How to reach us in Merate
    • Historical photos
    • Contacts
      • Contacts OAB
      • Telephone E-mail
      • Services
  • Research
    • Research activities
    • Scientific and technological projects
    • Publications
    • Report
    • Seminars
    • Funding
    • Thesis
      • Bachelor thesis
      • Master thesis
      • PhD thesis
      • Old students
    • Astronomical Links
  • Library and historical archive
  • Outreach
    • Visit the Observatory
    • School activities
    • Museo Astronomico di Brera
  • News
    • Scientific news
    • Outreach news
  • Work with us
  • Transparent administration
  • For staff only
  • English
  • Italian
INAF Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera
INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera
  • News, Scientific news

Building the largest map of the cosmos – Media INAF

This map shows, in yellow, the positions of the three deep fields (Euclid Deep Fields). Euclid Deep Field North is located in the upper left portion of the image, while the other two – Euclid Deep Field South and Euclid Deep Field Fornax – are located in the lower right. Credits: Esa/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/Nasa; Esa/Gaia/Dpac; Esa/Planck Collaboration
  • 23 March 2025
  • News, Scientific news

New ESO analysis confirms severe damage from industrial complex planned near Paranal – ESO Press Release

A cosmic rainbow over the VLT - Credits: ESO.
  • 17 March 2025
  • News

March 7, 2025 – Monthly meetings on violence and gender issues – Second meeting with professor Silvia Penati – UNIMIB

Locandina per incontro Silvia Penati
  • 27 February 2025
  • News, Scientific news

ESO observations help almost fully rule out 2024 YR4 asteroid impact – ESO Press Release

Asteroid 2024 YR4 observed with ESO’s Very Large Telescope - Credits: ESO.
  • 25 February 2025
  • News, Scientific news

Tylos and its impetuous atmosphere – Media INAF

Tylos (or Wasp-121b) is a gas giant located about 900 light-years away in the constellation of Puppis (The Puppis). Using the ESPRESSO instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope, it has been possible to reconstruct its atmosphere in three dimensions for the first time on an exoplanet. It was discovered that it is divided into three layers, with iron winds in the lower part, followed by a very fast jet of sodium and finally an upper layer of hydrogen winds. This type of climate has never been observed before on any planet. Credits: ESO/M. Kornmesser
  • 19 February 2025
  • News, Scientific news

“Out of science fiction”: First 3D observations of an exoplanet’s atmosphere reveal a unique climate – ESO Press Release

The 3D structure of the atmosphere of the exoplanet Tylos - Credits: ESO
  • 18 February 2025
  • News, Scientific news

Star cluster reveals its colours in stunning 80-million-pixel ESO image – ESO Press Release

This is an 80-million-pixel picture of the star cluster RCW 38, located 5500 light-years away in the constellation Vela. RCW 38 is a young cluster containing about 2000 stars, and is bursting with star-forming activity. The picture was taken with ESO’s Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA), operating in Chile’s Atacama Desert. It shows a mixture of gas, dust and stars, creating an extravagant, yet spectacular landscape. As VISTA observes infrared light, it is able to peer through most of the dust in this region, which would block our view when observing in visible light. Behind the dust, VISTA is showing young stars within dusty cocoons and cold ‘failed’ stars known as brown dwarfs, thus revealing the secrets within these young stellar nurseries. Credit: ESO/VVVX survey
  • 15 February 2025
  • News, Scientific news

February 11 “Imagine a world with more women in Science” – INAF celebrates STEM and Women in Science – Our contribution

Poster
  • 11 February 2025
  • News, Scientific news

OP 313, the blazar roars again – Media INAF

A composite image of the radio galaxy Hercules A, with the radio image obtained by Vla (New Mexico, USA) superimposed on the field photographed in optical by the orbiting Hubble Space Telescope. The optical image of the host galaxy is clearly visible in the center, and the two collimated radio jets emerging from the nuclear region. Blazars are sources of this type but fortuitously oriented with the axis of the relativistic jet in a direction close, within a few degrees, to the line of sight. Credits: NASA, ESA, S. Baum and C. O’Dea (RIT), R. Perley and W. Cotton (NRAO/ AUI/ NSF), and the Hubble Heritage Team (STSCI/AURA)
  • 9 February 2025
  • News, Outreach news

January 27, 2025 – Holocaust Remembrance Day – Pif’s interviews – From our Agnese Mandrino, head of the library and historical archive

Auschwitz camp after liberation - Web credits
  • 6 February 2025
  • News, Scientific news

STEM Week all INAF events – Edu INAF and our contribution

Una immagine dello spot realizzato dallo IED all'INAF per la giornate delle donne nella scienza
  • 5 February 2025
  • News

February 7, 2025 – Monthly meetings on violence and gender issues – First meeting with linguist and teacher Vera Gheno

Locandina conferenza Vera Gheno - Ciclo conferenze
  • 5 February 2025
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INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera

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