Tangible Heritage: Production of Astrolabes on a Laser Engraver
Abstract
The astrolabe, an analog computing device, used to be the iconic instrument of astronomers during the Middle Ages. It allowed a multitude of operations of practical astronomy which were otherwise cumbersome to perform in an epoch when mathematics had apparently almost been forgotten. Usually made from wood or sheet metal, a few hundred instruments, mostly from brass, survived until today and are valuable museum showpieces. This paper explains a procedural modelling approach for the construction of the classical kinds of astrolabes, which allows a wide variety of applications from plain explanatory illustrations to 3D models, and even the production of working physical astrolabes usable for public or classroom demonstrations.
BibTeX
@inproceedings {10.2312:egch.20071006,
booktitle = {EG Cultural Heritage Papers},
editor = {David B. Arnold and Andrej Ferko},
title = {{Tangible Heritage: Production of Astrolabes on a Laser Engraver}},
author = {Zotti, Georg},
year = {2007},
publisher = {The Eurographics Association},
DOI = {10.2312/egch.20071006}
}
booktitle = {EG Cultural Heritage Papers},
editor = {David B. Arnold and Andrej Ferko},
title = {{Tangible Heritage: Production of Astrolabes on a Laser Engraver}},
author = {Zotti, Georg},
year = {2007},
publisher = {The Eurographics Association},
DOI = {10.2312/egch.20071006}
}