There are two ways to make a stereo image. The simplest is to use two microphones (or a single stereo mic), place them appropriately and record. This technique will capture whatever L/R and depth information present in the recording space. The more commonly employed method is to independently record multiple mono tracks and then in the mixing process create a synthetic stereo image by altering L/R channel volume and phase/timing. When done with care, the synthetic stereo can be very convincing.
A center image is equivalent to a mono signal with equal volume in each channel generated by each speaker at the same time. Increasing the volume in one only will pull the image towards that speaker. Also delaying the signal will pull the image towards the opposite speaker. Artificial image depth can be created by various reverb/modulation programs.
A center image is equivalent to a mono signal with equal volume in each channel generated by each speaker at the same time. Increasing the volume in one only will pull the image towards that speaker. Also delaying the signal will pull the image towards the opposite speaker. Artificial image depth can be created by various reverb/modulation programs.