Galaxies, supernovas and black holes: many people are fascinated by computer-generated images and videos that showcase discoveries in astronomy. Some of these images come courtesy of computer scientist Javier Enciso. “Even as a teenager I would program landscapes on the PC,” explains the Colombian, who studied Computational Science and Engineering at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) on a DAAD scholarship after graduating with a bachelor’s degree in Bogotá. A student job in web development at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) set the course for his future career: after completing his master’s in 2010 and returning home to Villavicencio, Enciso continued to provide mission-critical software infrastructure to ESO – and soon after to other leading international research institutions, too. In 2020 he founded the company Enciso Systems, which nowadays works for some of the foremost space research institutions, such as the European Space Agency (ESA), the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile. “Thanks to my degree in Germany, I was able to realise my dreams,” says Javier Enciso. He is currently writing his doctoral thesis on modelling of the weather in space between the Earth and the moon: “A subject of crucial importance for the safety of future moon missions.” —
In action
The visual code of the stars
Computer scientist Javier Enciso recreates outer space on a PC.
Issue 1 | 2026