In 1951 Kirsch joined the National Bureau of Standards as part of the team that ran
SEAC (Standards Eastern Automatic Computer). a 176 × 176 array, in an area 5 cm × 5 cm (2" x 2"). The
bit depth was only one
bit per pixel, stark black and white with no intermediate shades of gray, but, by combining several scans made using different scanning thresholds,
grayscale information could also be acquired. They used the computer to extract
line drawings, count objects,
recognize alphanumeric characters, and produce
oscilloscope displays. He also proposed the
Kirsch operator for edge detection in images. Later in life, Kirsch became the director of research of the Sturvil Corporation and an advisory editor for the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). He was the advisory editor of the journal
Languages of Design. ==Personal life and death==