For the amateur astronomer...
Generalities
As far as weather is concerned, it is important to know that we have
two winters here. The "regular" austral winter, from July to August,
then the "altiplanic" winter, in January and February, the second one
being normally worse than the first one. During January February, the
weather is like most other places in the world, i.e. half clouded, half
useable. In July August, sometimes the weather stays perfect, some other
times it can be a bit cloudy. The rest of the year is basically clear
most of the time. For example, between August 28th, 2004 to January
5th, 2005, there were 5 cloudy nights. Of course, there are exceptions,
and it would be very risky coming only one night to observe, Murphy
is also a bastard in the Atacama desert. Of course, it is important
to avoid the full moon period.
As far as regular tourism, I could recommend reading my page on general
tourism in Chile. Moving around Chile is easy, transport systems
work well, and the country is as safe as any other place in the civilized
world. Relatively few people speak english, but it is possible to go
around relatively easily even if you don't speak spanish (I arrived
here without any notion of spanish, of course if you come you don't
have to get married here like I did :) ).
The observatories:
It would be weird as an amateur astronomer to come here and not take
advantage to visit a few observatories.
Here are the web sites of the chilean observatories :
Cerro Tololo, Cerro
Pachon
Las Campanas observatory
ESO La Silla
ESO Paranal - To visit Paranal,
see here
ESO ALMA
It is possible to visit the professional observatories, making reservations
several months in advance. They are normally opened for visits on saturday
and sundays, which forces to make choices, mainly with the observatories
located near La Serena. For the VLT, the visits are made only in the
last two week ends of the month. It is possible to contact the offices
of each observatory, or take a specialized guide, which will be able
to organize the visit and make the tour for you. We recommend our friend
Hernan Julio.
For the VLT, once you have obtained the official authorisation (don't
even think of arriving at the observatory without any authorisation
and outside of the regular visits), you need to rent a pick up truck
in Antofagasta ( with a small car, you may puncture a tire on the track
to the VLT), and drive on your own to the observatory in order to be
on time for the visit. Of course, it is impossible to stay there at
night. Be aware that there is traffic all the time on the road to Paranal,
big trucks driving relatively fast. If you want to stop, you really
want to go off road.
ALMA being so far in construction, there is nothing to visit so far,
and there are no visits organized there, at least as long as there will
be no medical permanence on site. There are a few instruments there,
like the japanese ASTE antenna from Tokyo University on the Pampa La
Bola at 4800 meters of altitude. Then the Caltech Background Imager
on the Chajnantor plateau, and finally APEX, the ALMA Pathfinder EXperiment,
which started working in 2005. These sites are all located above 5000
meters of altitude.
Another astronomical visit in the area is the Monturaqui impact crater.
Located to the south of the Salar de Atacama, it requires a four wheel
drive vehicle, and a day to make the back and forth trip (which could
give the opportunity to visit Toconao, Socaire and a few other places).
The easiest way is to contact us.
In San Pedro:
We organize tours for the general public, which allow to see the main
nebulae of the sky, austral too. Eventhough it is not mandatory for
us, we try to receive friendly and competent amateurs with a special
attention, allowing them to use the telescopes while we don't use them
during the tour (i.e. while we show the naked eye sky and explain the
constellations).
What we have seen several times are amateur astronomers who mainly wanted
to see the austral sky objects, and which finally started to look in
the north too. They knew these objects, but had never observed them
with a sky like ours.... While it is impossible to guarantee 100% clear
weather, or exceptional nights, the zodiacal light is normally visible,
the gegenshein too (when it is not in the Milky Way and there is no
moon of course) and sometimes the whole zodiacal arc. The magnitude
of the sky background on a moonless and milky wayless sky is very often
better than 21.8 and has been measured up to 22.2
One of the most frustrating experience for an amateur astronomer seeing
the chilean skies is to not have any instrument or a very small refractor
or binoculars, and being only able to imagine what these objects look
like in a real telescope.
We rent telescopes for the experienced amateur (send an email with your
web page). If you don't know how to use a telescope, this is not for
you.
We currently rent a Takahashi EM200 mount with FS102 refractor, 70mm
guidescope and ST4 guiding camera. It is under a shelter and correcly
polar aligned. It rents for 30000 chilean pesos per night.
If you want to see images taken with the Takahashi mount, you can look
for example at Cyril
Cavadore 's web site with images taken here with a Canon 20D, or
Pierre
Schmid 's web site with a Canon 20Da. More recently (June 2007),
Philippe
Lopez came here with his own mount to make some nice images with
his Canon 5D. Some other images taken with Serge Brunier with
a Nikon D100.
A mosaic
of Centaurus
A milky
way rising
A view of the zodiacal
light in the morning
A complete view of the Milky
Way with a 10mm fish eye
We also can rent our 33cm and our 45cm telescope. For the whole night,
the price of telescope renting is 1000 chilean pesos per cm of aperture
(30000 for the 33cm, and 45000 for the 45cm). Another solution is to
use the telescopes after my tours, in which case the 60cm is useable.
In this case, the telescope rental is half price.
Lodging in San Pedro for the observer:
Since Octobre 2007, we offer at Atacama lodge an hotel for the amateur
astronomer. We are about 7km to the south of San Pedro. It is necessary
to have a vehicle to come here. It is possible to rent the telescopes
there (we never rent telescopes on other site) and to take an hotel
in town. But in practice, it is quite hard to sleep in the morning when
you have the other tourists leaving at 4 to the Tatio geysers, others
at 5 to take their airplanes in Calama, other at 8, etc... our place
is very quiet, then you can observe and go in your lodge to prepare
a hot coffee or chocolate, take a nap when the mount is shooting. Another
aspect is that in the winter the night time temperature is very low
(like -15°C) and being inside while the telescope runs is a very nice
thing. The page for the lodges is here.


