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(1997) The elusive synthesis, Dordrecht, Springer.

Abstract painting and astronomical image processing

Michael Lynch , Samuel Edgerton

pp. 103-124

For ages, astronomers have sought to "envisage" the stars — that is, to imagine them as if they were close up, at the same distance from the viewer as ordinary three-dimensional objects on earth. This has meant that all astronomers, particularly if they wished to communicate their sky-images to others, have had to think of asterisms in the forms of traditional schemata, the accepted conventions of picture-making in the astronomer's native culture at a given historical time.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-1786-6_5

Full citation:

Lynch, M. , Edgerton, S. (1997)., Abstract painting and astronomical image processing, in A. Tauber (ed.), The elusive synthesis, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 103-124.

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