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Scientists recently analyzed Vincent van Gogh's Starry Night to see how well its famous swirls matched up with known atmospheric physics. After analysis, they found that not only did the shapes match up with our current ideas of atmospheric turbulence, but the colors used throughout the piece communicated fairly accurate physics at a remarkably small scale. Researchers think that Van Gogh could have come to understand these movements by "studying the movement of clouds and the atmosphere, or that he could have just had "an innate sense of how to capture the dynamism of the sky.

" The swirling colors and flowing brushstrokes of Vincent van Gogh's Starry Night have secured the painting (and its artist) a place among the all-time greats. As a piece of art, Starry Night is undeniably beautiful, but beauty alone is often not enough to keep a painting so cemented in the minds and hearts of the public. Beyond just being beautiful, Starry Night somehow manages to capture the feeling of a clear night sky.



Capturing feeling may be the whole point of impressionism—Van Gogh is himself most often labeled a post-impressionist, a style separate from true impressionism that nonetheless uses many impressionist techniques—but Starry Night does a singular job at managing it. Something about those particular swirls of paint just..

. feels like the night. Enough so that scientists.

.. Jackie Appel.

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