Three years after the dedication of the road, the
first stage of the constructions had been finally completed, the middle-size telescopes
had become operational while the hotel, the dormitories, a workshop, a storage
space -among other facilities- had been completed as well. Thus, in March 25
1969, La Silla Observatory was inaugurated, with an audience of more than
300 people among Government officials, representatives of AURA and CARSO (Carnegie
Southern Observatory, at las Campanas), besides staff members of ESO, and other
guests. After two decades of growth, since the first initiatives towards La Silla
creation in June 1953, the dream had become a reality.
La
Silla Telescopes
In 1958 the EC appointed an Instrumentation Committee
(IC), which should be in charge of the future instrumentation in La Silla. The
IC was given two main tasks: preparing all technical and financial aspects of
the instrumentation so as to enable the EC to take the necessary decisions, and
making all necessary technical and instrumental decisions within the frame of
the budget. Hence, one of the IC’s first assignments was the specification of
the telescopes in La Silla; thus in 1961, they recommended the construction of
the middle-size telescopes: 1 m and 1.5 m, both erected only
in the second half of the 1960s. In 1968, the GPO (Grand Prism Objectif)
was installed in La Silla to resume its work after eight years of service in the
site testing activities in South Africa. In 1971, the 1.2-m Schmidt was
finally installed in La Silla, as was the ESO 50 cm -a duplicate of the
Copenhagen 50 cm-. Then, in November 1976, the largest telescope foreseen in the
"initial program" the 3.6 m saw "first light". Subsequently, a 1.4-m
CAT (Coude Auxiliary Telescope) would feed a high-resolution spectrograph
within the 3.6-m telescope building. In 1984, the 2.2 m began its operations,
while in March 1989, the 3.5-m New Technology Telescope (NTT) saw "first
light". Last, but not least, the SEST (Swedish ESO Submillimetre Telescope)
is the only large submillimetre telescope (15-m diameter) in the southern hemisphere.
It was built in 1987 on behalf of the Swedish Natural Science Research Council
(NFR) and the European Southern Observatory.
National
Telescopes
An extension of the telescope park not foreseen
in the early days constituted the so-called National Telescopes. These are "telescopes
which are property of one of the member states -or of an institute in one of these
states- which are placed on La Silla and, as compensation for ESO services, ESO
obtains a fraction of the observing time". The first telescope built under this
category was the Bochum 61cm, installed in September 1968. The second one
was the Danish 50 cm (or SAT, for Strömgren Automatic Telescope) from the
Copenhagen University Observatory in Denmark, whose operation began in 1971. A
third one, the Danish 1.5 m, became operational in October 1979. The
90-cm Dutch Telescope –the "Light Collector", property of the Leiden Observatory
in the Netherlands- was removed from its site at the Leiden Southern Station in
South Africa, and re-erected at La Silla during 1978 and 1979. Lastly, ESO has
granted full operational night to a number of projects run by their patronizing
institutes. These are: Marly 1 m (Marseille Observatory), the Geneva
1.2 m (Geneva Observatory) and the DENIS (Côte d’Azur and Paris observatories).
Nowadays, only a few telescopes are under operation.
The ESO 50 cm, Schmidt, CAT 1.4 m and Bochum 61 cm, have been decommissioned.
The table below lists all the telescopes in the history of a Silla, including
the ones that are currently active (in blue characters).
| ESO
Operated Telescopes | National
Telescopes |
| 3.6
m | DENIS
1 m |
| 2.2
m | MARLY
1 m (EROS project) |
|
ESO
1.5 m
| Geneva
1.2 m |
| Danish
1.5 m | Danish
50 cm |
|
NTT
3.5 m | Dutch
90 cm |
|
SEST
15 m
| Marseille
40 cm |
|
ESO 50 cm |
Bochum 61 cm |
| CAT
1.4 m | IRIS |
| Schmidt
1 m | . |
| GPO
(replaced by Marly 1 m) | . |