Aims. This work provides the results of the first six years of operation by the systematic night-sky monitoring at ESO-Paranal (Chile).Methods. The night-sky brightness was estimated on about 10 000 VLT-FORS1 archival images, obtained on more than 650 separate nights, distributed over 6 years, and covering the descent from maximum to minimum of sunspot cycle n. 23. Additionally, a set of about 1000 low-resolution, optical, night-sky spectra were extracted and analysed. Results. The unprecedented database discussed in this paper has led to detecting a clear seasonal variation of the broad-band night-sky brightness in the passbands, similar to the well-known semi-annual oscillation of the Na I D doublet. The spectroscopic data demonstrate that this seasonality is common to all spectral features, with the remarkable exception of the OH rotational-vibrational bands. A clear dependency on the solar activity is detected in all passbands and is particularly pronounced in the band, where the sky brightness decreased by ∼0.6 mag arcsec from maximum to minimum of solar cycle n. 23. No correlation is found between solar activity and the intensity of the Na I D doublet and the OH bands. A strong correlation between the intensity of N I 5200 and [OI]6300, 6364 is reported here for the first time. The paper also addresses the determination of the correlation time-scales with solar activity and the possible connection with the flux of charged particles emitted by the Sun. © 2008 ESO.
CITATION STYLE
Patat, F. (2008). The dancing sky: 6 years of night-sky observations at Cerro Paranal. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 481(2), 575–591. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20079279
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