Instituto de Astronomía Teórica y Experimental

The Instituto de Astronomía Teórica y Experimental (IATE) is a scientific institute funded by the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones en Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) and the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba (UNC), located in the city of Córdoba, Argentina, and dedicated to the study of different topics in astronomy. The headquarters of the institute are located at the Observatorio Astronómico de Córdoba.

Instituto de Astronomía Teórica y Experimental
AcronymIATE
Established2006
DirectorDr. Diego García Lambas
AddressLaprida 922
CityCórdoba
StateProvincia de Córdoba
CountryArgentina
Coordinates31°25′16″S 64°11′59″W
Web Sitehttp://www.iate.oac.uncor.edu/
e-mailiate@oac.uncor.edu

History

In the 1960s, Dr. José Luis Sérsic[1] (argentinian scientist mainly known for his empirical law for the intensity of a galaxy called Sersic's Law) created the extragalactic astronomy department at the Observatorio Astronómico de Córdoba, where he developed his academic and research activities, forming his first disciples. In 1983, the department became the "Programa de Investigaciones en Astronomía Teórica y Experimental" (IATE), funded by CONICET, under Dr. Sérsic direction. Following the death of Dr. Sérsic on July 19, 1993, the program was discontinued. However, those graduates and PhD who were trained under his tutelage were ordered to continue with the group IATE as research group within the Observatorio Astronómico, under the leadership of Dr. Diego Garcia Lambas, one of the main disciples of Dr. Sérsic. After more than 10 years of hard work forming graduates, PhD and researchers, and to become one of the most numerous research groups within the Observatorio Astronómico, the IATE group has become one of the institutes of CONICET in 2006, with Dr. Diego Garcia Lambas being its first director. The institute then took the name of Instituto de Astronomía Teórica y Experimental, retaining the acronym IATE.

The building of the institute located at the Observatorio Astronómico de Córdoba.

Members

At the IATE, there are 25 Ph.D in the researcher career of CONICET, 37 Ph.D and postdoctoral fellows, 9 members of the support staff career of CONICET, 1 contract staff, and 2 graduates and Ph.D working at the institute.[2]

Abadi, MarioCharalambous, CarolinaGiuppone, CristianMuriel, HernánRodríguez, FacundoValotto, Carlos
Algorry, DavidCoenda, ValeriaGonzalez, ElizabethO'Mill, Ana LauraRodríguez, HoracioVega Neme, Luis
Alonso, María VictoriaColazo, CarlosGraña, DaríoOio, GabrielRuíz, AndrésVena Valdarenas, Román
Baravalle, LauraCosta, AndreaGurovich, SebastiánPaez Tagliaferro, TaniaSalerno, Juan ManuelVillalón, Carolina
Beaugé, CristianDíaz-Giménez, EugeniaKanagusuku, María JoséPaz, DanteSanchez, BrunoVillarreal, Carolina
Benitez Llambay, AlejandroDe los Ríos, MartínKrapp, LeonardoPereyra, LuisSantucho, Ma. VictoriaVrech, Rubén
Benitez Llambay, PabloDomínguez, MarianoLares, MarceloRagone Figueroa, CinthiaSchmidt, EduardoYaryura, Yamila
Bertazzi, VivianaDomínguez, RubénLuparello, HelianaRamos Almendares, FelipeSchneiter, MatíasZandivarez, Ariel
Bornancini, CarlosDonoso Navea, LauraMaldonado, VictoriaRamos, XimenaSgró, Mario AgustínZurbriggen, Ernesto
Casagrande, ArnaldoDonzelli, CarlosMartínez, Héctor JuliánRecabarren, PabloSieyra, Valeria
Cécere, MarianaFerreiro, DiegoMerchán, ManuelRenzi, VíctorSillero Ros, Emanuel
Ceccarelli, LauraFerrero, IsmaelMondino, AnabellaRodriguez, AdrianaStarck Cuffini, Manuel
Chalela García, MartínGarcía Lambas, DiegoMuñoz Jofré, María RosaRodriguez, SilvioTaverna, Antonella

Scientific Areas

The lines of research are:

  • Galactic and Extragalactic Astronomy
  • Large Scale Structure of the Universe
  • Planetary Systems
  • Astrophysical Plasmas
  • Instrumental Astronomy and Site Testing

Galactic and Extragalactic Astronomy

The Seyfert's Sextet

The 13.8 billion years of the Universe is enough time to form giant objects, being the galaxies one of the most interesting. Galaxies are truly island universes where dark matter, billions of stars and huge amounts of gas and dust coexist in equilibrium, and yet, they are an environment suitable for the formation of new stars. Galaxies also tend to cluster in a network of cosmic proportions which highlights fabulous large structures formed by thousands of galaxies. At the IATE, the study of galaxies has been a constant challenge, which has allowed to consolidate over the years different methods for the study of the formation and evolution of galaxies. Some of the most important are:

  • Numerical Simulations: the physical processes that govern the evolutionary history of one or many galaxies are recreated by using supercomputers:
  • Statistical Studies: properties of galaxies are inferred and analysed from large data surveys;
  • Astronomical Observations: classic observations and the most modern and sophisticated techniques are combined by using the telescope facilities around the world.

These and other tools are used by different scientists at the IATE to perform original and reliable astronomical research.

Large Scale Structure of the Universe

Numerical simulation of a CDM universe with dark energy (Andrey Kravtsov and Anatoly Klypin)

The large-scale structure of the Universe is the field of cosmology that studies the distribution of the matter in the Universe on the largest scales. This field has grown remarkably since the '80s, with the development of three-dimensional maps of galaxies in several bands of the electromagnetic spectrum, and with the observation of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). The increasing flow of information generated by observations has allowed to obtain reliable characterization of the content of the universe comprising

as well as its distribution. The distribution of the structures seems to follow a hierarchical model where the upper level is dominated by a network of clusters and filaments. On top of that, the universe appears to be isotropic and homogeneous in accordance with the cosmological principle. From the analysis of catalogs and the development of numerical simulations, the distribution is characterized through the implementation of different statistics that allow the study of the spatial distribution as well as the dynamics by means of the velocity field of the matter distribution.

Planetary Systems

Artist's concept of a protoplanetary disk.

The question of the existence of other worlds has been present in the history of mankind for centuries, but only recent scientific evidence has confirmed that planets could exist and are common outside the Solar System. Since the first discovery in 1992, over 850 new exoplanets have been cataloged. Contrary to the Solar System, exoplanets' population presents several examples of exoplanets at very small distances from its stars, highly eccentric planetary orbits, and they are frequently found in configurations not previously imagined. This led to the development of new theories and areas of research, which ultimately can help us to better understand the Solar System. Some of the projects that are currently being developed at the IATE include:

  • Analyses of observational data for exoplanets (radial velocity and transit);
  • Models of tidal interaction with the central star to study the origin of the population of "hot" exoplanets
  • Study of the dynamics of extrasolar planets in mean motions resonances;
  • Development of hydrodynamic codes to describe the interaction between planets and the protoplanetary disk;
  • Analyses of the formation of planets in binary stellar systems.

Astrophysical Plasmas

An eruptive prominence on the surface of the sun.

The plasma is the most common state of the baryonic matter in the Universe (99%). Most of a star, the interplanetary and interstellar medium, and the ionosphere, are plasmas. The plasma can also be generated in terrestrial laboratories for industrial applications such as producing surface coatings, precision cuts in lamps, micro-motors, and plasma reactors. A plasma is a fluid consisting of a large number of free charged particles (globally neutral and whose kinetic energy is larger than the electrostatic potential energy between them). The charges and currents that conform a plasma are sources of the electromagnetic fields and, in turn, these fields affect the distribution of charges and currents which makes its dynamics highly nonlinear and very different from that of a neutral gas. When the magnetic fields are capable of modifying an individual particle trajectory, it is said that the plasma is magnetized. The corona is highly magnetized and therefore, several structures are observed, some of which can maintain its stability for relatively long times as dark filaments on the surface of the sun. In the group of astrophysical plasmas, our scientist perform studies about the dynamic configuration and structures of the corona through the analysis of magnetic arcs and prominences, the formation of voids that remain in the plasma due to the interaction of nonlinear waves, the formation of very energetic shock wave capable of sweeping the chromosphere along a whole quadrant, etc. The team also analyse the interaction of stellar winds with the magnetosphere of exoplanets, and they model the morphology of supernova remnants affected by instabilities and the influence of the magnetic field.

Site Testing

The IATE also performs site testing for the installation of large astronomical facilities in the Argentinian territory. During the 90's (1989-1998), the IATE began the first work on astronomical site testing performing seeing measurements in the Antarctic Base Belgrano II. In 1998, measurements of seeing were performed in the Llano de Chajnantor, Atacama (Chile), as part of a project aimed at installing a liquid mercury telescope in Toco volcano. This project was not successful but the group learnt the use of the most modern technologies for measuring sky parameters. Through this experience, the IATE made contact with Dr. Marc Sarazin, of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), with whom, since the year 2000, the IATE began the searching and characterization of candidate sites to install the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT),[3][4][5][6][7] which will be finally installed in Chile, at the Cerro Armazones. During that work, a suitable candidate site was preselected at the Cordón Macón, close to Tolar Grande town. Because of its excellent conditions, the IATE decided to install observational facilities at this site,[8][9] which is the most important project to date for the instrumentation team. The project also involves the development of a program committed to the educational public outreach in astronomy at the town of Tolar Grande, named Ñawi Puna.[10]

View from the Macón peak at the Cordón Macón, Salta, Argentina.

The New Astronomical Complex

The first observatory building at the Macón peak (May, 2012).

The IATE is building an astronomical complex on the Cordón Macón, located at 10 km from the town of Tolar Grande, Salta, Argentina. The site is located at latitude 24.61 South and longitude 67.32 West and at an altitude of 4,650 meters. The location has ideal conditions of humidity and air turbulence, which create almost perfect astronomical seeing. The site infrastructure will enable the development of several observational projects:


  • The ABRAS project: The Argentina-Brasil Astronomical Center is a project involving both Latin-American countries. The main institutions behind the project are the IATE, from Argentina, and the IAG (Instituto de Astronomia, Geofísica e Ciencias Atmosféricas), from Sao Paulo, Brasil, while the funding institutions are the Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación Productiva and the University of Sao Paulo (Universidade de Sao Paulo, USP). The project involves the installation of an astronomical observational facility in the Cordón Macón. The 1 meter telescope will be installed in an 8-meter diameter dome. The building and the installation of the dome was performed during 2011-2012, while the 1 meter telescope arrived to Córdoba (Argentina) during October 2015. One of the main goals of the project is to optimize the telescope for performing astronomical observations in the infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum. The first observations with this telescope is expected to be perform for the year 2016.
  • The TOROS project: The Transient Optical Robotic Observatory of the South (TOROS) project is a collaboration among scientists from The University of Texas at Brownsville, the Universidad Nacional de Cordoba (UNC), CALTECH and Texas A&M University. The project intend to construct a dedicated optical follow-up instrument for Advanced LIGO (aLIGO) and Advanced Virgo (AdVirgo) in order to surveying the sky for even very dim afterglows of gravitational waves events. The project also pursuit the aim of detecting nearby supernovas. The first workshop of the TOROS collaboration was held in the city of Salta, Argentina, in June, 2013.
  • The ISON project: The International Scientific Optical Network (ISON) program is an international effort that intend to understand and catalogue the space debris population in the near-Earth space and of potentially hazardous Near Earth Objects (NEOs). In order to contribute to this program, the Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics (KIAM) of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS), of the Russian Federation, will work together with the Comisión Nacional de Actividades Espaciales (CONAE), the IATE, the Observatorio Astronómico de Córdoba (OAC) and the Goberment of the Provincia de Salta in Argentina, to install and operate two small telescopes of 20 and 25 cm of diameter, that will be operated remotely via Internet connection. The aim of this cooperation is to perform observations of orbital debris, asteroids, comets and optical counterparts of gamma-ray bursts.

FoF meetings

Yearly, the IATE organizes the astronomical meeting named "Friends-of-Friends", usually carried out during the first fortnight of April. The meeting is aimed at stretching the bounds between the astronomers that work at the IATE and their external collaborators, as well as sharing the state-of-the-art of works that are being developed by the IATE members. The talks are split into two different modes: invited speakers present talks of 45+15 minutes, while there are several short talks of 15+5 minutes long.

YearInvited speakersAffiliationTitle
2011Gary MamonIAP, Paris, FranceHow do galaxies acquire their mass and when do they form their stars?
Juan MadridCAS, SUT, Melbourne, AustraliaStructural parameters of globular clusters and UCDs in Virgo and Coma
Norbert PrzybillaAI, FAU, Erlangen, GermanyGalactochemical evolution as traced by massive stars
Dante MinnitiPUC, Santiago, ChileCharting the hidden side of the Milky Way
Gian Luigi GranatoINAF, Padova, ItalyPuffing up early-type galaxies by baryonic mass loss: Numerical Experiments
Osvaldo MoreschiFAMAF-UNC, Córdoba, ArgentinaGravitational lensing in terms of Energy-Momentum tensor and an interesting solution of Einstein equation
2012Nelson PadillaPUC, Santiago, ChileMegaparsec scale effects on the inner pcs of galaxies
Lucas MacriTAMU, Texas, EE.UU.The Cepheid Distance Scale in the era of precision cosmology
Dante MinnitiPUC, Santiago, ChileNew Southern Extrasolar Planet Searches
Carlos BriozzoFAMAF-UNC, Córdoba, ArgentinaEmpirical mode decomposition: a new tool for signal analysis
Robert ProctorIAG, Sao Paulo, BrazilJPAS: a new resource for stellar population research?
2013Daniel GómezIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.Magnetic fields in astrophysics: the dynamic of the solar corona
Dante MinnitiPUC, Santiago, ChileThe Milky Way galaxy
Christian Moni-BidinIAUCN, Antofagasta, ChileDynamical mass in the solar neighborhood
Mario DíazUTB, Brownsville, EE.UU.The TOROS project and the advanced LIGO era
Sofía CoraFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.Galaxy formation: what can we learn from semi-analytic models?
Federico StasyszynUSM, Munich, GermanyInsights on magnetic fields in astrophysics
Facundo GómezUM, Ann Arbor, EE.UU.Examining galaxy formation and evolution with the Milky Way and its satellites
Nelson PadillaPUC, Santiago, ChileEffects of the stochasticity of galaxy angular momentum growth on star formation
Alessio RomeoUAB, Santiago, ChileEvolution of the metallicity-mass relations from cosmological-SPH simulations of galaxy clusters and groups
Osvaldo MoreschiFAMAF-UNC, Córdoba, ArgentinaModeling compact objects by particles in general relativity
Ezequiel TreisterUC, Concepción, ChileThe cosmic history of black hole growth
Patricia TisseraIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.The stellar haloes of Milky-Way galaxies:chemical patterns and their history of assemble
2014Osvaldo MoreschiFAMAF-UNC, Córdoba, ArgentinaExact solutions with spheroidal geometries and it use in astrophysical systems
Nelson PadillaPUC, Santiago, ChileEffects of spin flips and siews on galaxy formation
Douglas GeislerUC, Concepción, ChileWhat is a globular cluster? What is an open cluster?
Cesar BertucciIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.Induced magnetospheres in the Solar System
Pablo DmitrukDF-UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.Low frequency fluctuations and magnetic field reversals in MHD turbulence
Lilia BassinoFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.Stellar systems in the Antlia Cluster
Daniel CarpinteroFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.Tori, chaos, resonances: a new way of looking at orbits
Juan Carlos ForteFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.Globular clusters: the ADN of early type galaxies?
Sergio ElaskarFCEFyN-UNC, Córdoba, Arg.New theory for chaotic intermittency
Paul Matthew SutterIAP, Paris, FranceCosmic voids as cosmological laboratories
Rory SmithUC, Concepción, ChileThe effects of ram pressure and harassment on dwarf galaxies
2015Mario DíazUTB, Brownsville, EE.UU.Looking for the first kilonova
Osvaldo MoreschiFAMAF-UNC, Córdoba, ArgentinaGeneral equations for gravitational lenses in cosmology
Dante MinnitiPUC, Santiago, ChileGalactic structure with the VVV Survey
Omar López CruzINAOE, MéxicoSeyfert's Sextet: Timing the Disruption of Galaxies and the Formation of the Intragroup Medium
Georgina ColdwellUNSJ, San Juan, ArgentinaOn the relation between AGN and environment at low redshift
Sergio CelloneFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg. Optical studies of AGN, their host galaxies, and their environments
Noam LiberskindAIP, Potsdam, GermanyShearing and shaping the dwarf galaxies of the Local Group
Gian Luigi GranatoINAF, Padova, ItalyThe early phases of galaxy clusters formation in IR
Cristina MandriniIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.Solar coronal magnetic field structure and observed energy release locations
Daniel GomezIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.Reconexión magnética y turbulencia en plasmas espaciales y astrofísicos
Carlos CarrascoCRYA, MéxicoRadio emission from Protostellar Jets
Mario Daniel MelitaIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.The colors of the objects in the outer Solar System: cosmic radiation, activity and physical collisions
Carlos ColazoOAC, Córdoba, ArgentinaDiscovery of the first ring system in an asteroid
Nelson PadillaPUC, Santiago, ChileRobust estimators for correlation function measurement
Lucas MacriTAMU, Texas, EE.UU.The Hubble constant in the era of precision cosmology
Stefan GottloeberAIP, Potsdam, GermanyCosmology with the Jubilee and MultiDark simulations
Claudia Mendes de OliveiraIAG, Sao Paulo, BrazilEnvironmental studies of galaxies with A-PLUS and J-PAS
2016Sofía CoraFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.Evolution of galaxy properties: metallicity and colors
Georgina ColdwellUNSJ, San Juan, ArgentinaSystematic search of extragalactic sources in the VVV survey area
Stefano CristianiINAF, Padova, ItalyThe contribution of quasars and galaxies to the UV background
Giuseppe MuranteINAF, Padova, ItalySimulating disk galaxies with a novel sub-grid prescription
Gian Luigi GranatoINAF, Padova, ItalyThe central structure of intra-cluster medium: recent encouraging results from simulations
Laerte SodréIAG, Sao Paulo, BrazilGalaxy evolution with machine learning
Rosa Domínguez TenreiroUAM, Madrid, SpainSome inputs on galaxy formation and its observational consequences
Lilia BassinoFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.What can non-standard properties of globular cluster systems tell us on its host-galaxy formation?
María Fernanda NievasUniversity of Innsbruck, AustriaOB stars as laboratories for numerous astrophysical fields
Omar López CruzINAOE, MéxicoSCI-HI: Searching for the first galaxies
Mario DíazUTB, Brownsville, EE.UU.The birth of gravitational wave astronomy
Arianna Di CintioDCC, Copenhagen, DenmarkDistinguishing CDM from non standard DM models: the vital role of baryon physics
Lucas MacriTAMU, Texas, EE.UU.Extragalactic variables and their application to cosmology
Sergio DassoIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.Coherent and LSSs in the solar wind, their driven shocks, and effects on galactic cosmic rays
Mario MelitaIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.The origin of the ring system of asteroid (10199) Chariklo
Octavio GuileraFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.Numerical methods in giant planet formation
Gustavo RomeroIAR, Buenos Aires, ArgentinaGravitational waves: history, detection, and prospects
2017Javier Alonso-GarcíaUANTOF, Antofagasta, ChileThe inner Galactic globular clusters
Álvaro Alvarez CandalON, Río de Janeiro, BrazilWhat we (don't) know about the trans-Neptunian objects
Marcelo ArnalFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.LLAMA: A new "road" for astronomical observing research
Michael BaloghUniversity of Waterloo, CanadaSatellite galaxies and the baryon cycle
Jura BorissovaIFA, Valparaiso, ChileStar clusters in the VVV survey
Francesco Di MilleLCO, La Serena, ChileLas Campanas Observatory: past, present and future
Alejandro EsquivelUNAM, DF, MéxicoModeling the interaction of an exoplanet and its host star: the case of HD 209458b
Stefan GottloeberAIP, Potsdam, GermanyNear Field Cosmology
Gian Luigi GranatoINAF, Padova, ItalyOn dust-covered simulations
Yara JafféESO, Santiago, ChileThe impact of ram-pressure stripping in cluster and group galaxies
Yolanda Jiménez TejaON, Río de Janeiro, BrazilCHEF bases for astronomical data analysis
Radostin KurtevIFA, Valparaiso, ChileVVV astrometry, proper motions and parallaxes
Gastão Lima NetoIAG, Sao Paulo, BrazilGalaxy cluster collisions
Martín MaklerCBPF, Río de Janeiro, BrazilGravitational arcs as cosmological and astrophysical probes: the case of Stripe 82
Sebastián NuzaIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.Gas accretion onto MW-like galaxies and the Local Group
Nelson PadillaPUC, Santiago, ChileWhen to care about the angular momentum in galaxy formation simulations
Karla Peña RamírezUANTOF, Antofagasta, ChileLow mass stellar and substellar population in young star forming regions: the Sigma Orionis case
Manolis PlionisNOA, Athens, GreeceUsing HII galaxies as a tracer of the high-z Hubble expansion
Sebastián Ramírez AlegríaIFA, Valparaiso, ChileNear-infrared eyes to observe obscured and massive young stellar clusters
Adrián RoveroIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.What VHE gamma-ray astronomy can do about the IGMF
Cecilia ScannapiecoDF, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.The formation of disk galaxies in computer simulations
Cai Yan-ChuanROE, Edinburgh, ScotlandCosmology with Cosmic Voids
Gustavo YepesUAM, Madrid, SpainThe MUSIC of galaxy clusters
2018Roberto GonzálezPUC, Santiago, ChileDeep learning for galaxy identification and detection
Segio CelloneFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.Optical microvariability in AGN: truth, post-truth and statistics
Stanley KurtzUNAM, DF, MéxicoUltra/Hyper-compact HII regions: final frontier or end of the road?
Sandro VillanovaUC, Concepción, ChileThe ancient bulge
Lidia CydaleFCAG, UNLP, La Plata, Arg.Radiation line-driven winds in B supergiants
Roberto MuñozPUC, Santiago, ChileTransitioning from academia to industry
Fernando RoigON, Río de Janeiro, BrazilOn the impact flux and crater record of terrestrial planets and asteroids
Rodrigo DíazIAFE, UBA, Buenos Aires, Arg.Extrasolar planet observations and analysis: recent advances and future directions
Cristina CappaIAR, Buenos Aires, Arg.Infrared dust bubbles:gas, dust and star formation
Joaquín PrietoDAS, Santiago, ChileMass transport in galaxies
Jorge CuadraPUC, Santiago, ChileGas dynamics and SMBHG accretion in the galactic centre
EditionYearLOC Members
I2011Eugenia Díaz-Giménez, Cinthia Ragone Figueroa, Ariel Zandivarez, José Nilo Castellón, Heliana Luparello, Viviana Bertazzi, Diego García Lambas
II2012Marcela Pacheco, Andrés Ruiz, Ernesto Zurbriggen, José Nilo Castellón, Dario Graña, Viviana Bertazzi, Eugenia Díaz-Giménez, Diego García Lambas
III2013Mario Sgró, Ismael Ferrero, Diego García Lambas
IV2014David Algorry, Ernesto Zurbriggen, Andrea Costa, Diego García Lambas
V2015Facundo Rodriguez, Adriana Rodriguez Kamenetzky, Elizabeth Gonzalez, Andrea Costa, Diego García Lambas
VI2016Mario Abadi, Valeria Coenda, Gian Luigi Granato, Julián Martinez, Cinthia Ragone Figueroa, Viviana Bertazzi, Andrea Costa, Diego García Lambas
VII2017 Viviana Bertazzi, Mariana Cécere, Mariano Dominguez, Luciana Gramajo, Damián Mast, Luis Pereyra, Emanuel Sillero, Tania Tagliaferro, Antonela Taverna
VIII2018 Viviana Bertazzi, Carolina Charalambous, Guillermo Gunthardt, Ma. José Kanagusuku, Marcelo Lares, Pablo López, Celeste Parisi, Andrés Ruiz

These editions were organized jointly with the Observatorio Astronómico de Córdoba

References

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