bionic (1) mapproject.1gmt.gz

Provided by: gmt-common_5.4.3+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       mapproject - Do forward and inverse map transformations, datum conversions and geodesy

SYNOPSIS

       mapproject [ tables ]  -Jparameters
        -Rregion  [   -Ab|B|f|F|o|O[lon0/lat0][+v]  ] [  -C[dx/dy] ] [  -Dc|i|p ] [  -E[datum] ] [  -F[unit] ] [
       -G[lon0/lat0][+a][+i][+u[+|-]unit][+v] ] [  -I ] [   -Lline.xy[+u[+|-]unit][+p]  ]  [   -N[a|c|g|m]  ]  [
       -Q[d|e  ]  [   -S ] [  -T[h]from[/to] ] [  -V[level] ] [  -W[w|h] ] [  -Z[speed][+a][+i][+f][+tepoch] ] [
       -bbinary ] [ -dnodata ] [ -eregexp ] [ -fflags ] [ -ggaps ] [ -hheaders ] [  -iflags  ]  [  -oflags  ]  [
       -pflags ] [ -sflags ] [ -:[i|o] ]

       Note: No space is allowed between the option flag and the associated arguments.

DESCRIPTION

       mapproject  reads  (longitude,  latitude)  positions  from  tables [or standard input] and computes (x,y)
       coordinates using the specified map projection and scales. Optionally, it can read  (x,y)  positions  and
       compute  (longitude,  latitude)  values  doing the inverse transformation.  This can be used to transform
       linear (x,y) points obtained by digitizing a map of known projection  to  geographical  coordinates.  May
       also  calculate  distances  along track, to a fixed point, or closest approach to a line.  Alternatively,
       can be used to perform various datum conversions.  Additional data fields are permitted after the first 2
       columns  which must have (longitude,latitude) or (x,y). See option -: on how to read (latitude,longitude)
       files.  Finally, mapproject can compute a variety of auxiliary output data from  input  coordinates  that
       make  up  a track.  Items like azimuth, distances, distances to other lines, and travel-times along lines
       can all be computed by using one or more of the options -A, -G, -L, and -Z.

REQUIRED ARGUMENTS

       -Jparameters (more …)
              Select map projection.

       -Rxmin/xmax/ymin/ymax[+r][+uunit] (more …)
              Specify the region of interest. Special case for the UTM projection: If -C is used and -R  is  not
              given  then  the  region  is  set  to  coincide with the given UTM zone so as to preserve the full
              ellipsoidal solution (See RESTRICTIONS for more information).

OPTIONAL ARGUMENTS

       table  One or more ASCII (or binary, see -bi[ncols][type]) data table file(s) holding a  number  of  data
              columns. If no tables are given then we read from standard input.

       -Ab|B|f|F|o|O[lon0/lat0][+v]
              Calculate  azimuth  along track or to the optional fixed point set with lon0/lat0.  -Af calculates
              the (forward) azimuth to each data point. Use -Ab to get back-azimuth from data  points  to  fixed
              point.  Use  -Ao  to  get orientations (-90/90) rather than azimuths (0/360). Upper case F, B or O
              will convert from geodetic to geocentric latitudes and estimate azimuth of geodesics (assuming the
              current  ellipsoid  is  not  a sphere). If no fixed point is given then we compute the azimuth (or
              back-azimuth) from the previous point.  Alternatively, append +v to obtain a  variable  2nd  point
              (lon0/lat0) via columns 3-4 in the input file.

       -C[dx/dy]
              Set center of projected coordinates to be at map projection center [Default is lower left corner].
              Optionally, add offsets in the projected units to be added (or  subtracted  when  -I  is  set)  to
              (from)  the  projected coordinates, such as false eastings and northings for particular projection
              zones  [0/0].  The  unit  used  for  the  offsets  is  the  plot  distance  unit  in  effect  (see
              PROJ_LENGTH_UNIT) unless -F is used, in which case the offsets are in meters.

       -Dc|i|p
              Temporarily  override  PROJ_LENGTH_UNIT and use c (cm), i (inch), or p (points) instead. Cannot be
              used with -F.

       -E[datum]
              Convert from geodetic (lon, lat, height) to Earth Centered Earth Fixed (ECEF) (x,y,z)  coordinates
              (add  -I  for  the inverse conversion). Append datum ID (see -Qd) or give ellipsoid:dx,dy,dz where
              ellipsoid may be an ellipsoid ID (see -Qe) or given as a[,inv_f], where a is the  semi-major  axis
              and inv_f is the inverse flattening (0 if omitted). If datum is - or not given we assume WGS-84.

       -F[unit]
              Force 1:1 scaling, i.e., output (or input, see -I) data are in actual projected meters. To specify
              other units, append the desired unit (see UNITS). Without -F, the output (or input, see -I) are in
              the units specified by PROJ_LENGTH_UNIT (but see -D).

       -G[lon0/lat0][+a][+i][+u[+|-]unit][+v]
              Calculate  distances  along  track or to the optional fixed point set with -Glon0/lat0. Append the
              distance unit with +u (see UNITS for available units and how distances are computed), including  c
              (Cartesian   distance   using   input  coordinates)  or  C  (Cartesian  distance  using  projected
              coordinates). The C unit requires -R and -J to be set. When no fixed point is given  we  calculate
              accumulative distances [or by adding +a] along the track defined by the input points. Append +i to
              obtain incremental distances between successive points, or  append  both  modifiers  to  get  both
              distance  measurements.  Alternatively,  append  +v to obtain a variable 2nd point (lon0/lat0) via
              columns 3-4 in the input file.

       -I     Do the Inverse transformation, i.e., get (longitude,latitude) from (x,y) data.

       -Lline.xy[+u[+|-]unit][+p]
              Determine the shortest distance from the input data points to  the  line(s)  given  in  the  ASCII
              multisegment  file line.xy. The distance and the coordinates of the nearest point will be appended
              to the output as three new columns. Append the distance unit (see UNITS for  available  units  and
              how  distances  are  computed),  including  c  (Cartesian  distance  using input coordinates) or C
              (Cartesian distance using projected coordinates). The C  unit  requires  -R  and  -J  to  be  set.
              Finally,  append  +p  to  report  the  line  segment id and the fractional point number instead of
              lon/lat of the nearest point.

       -N[a|c|g|m]
              Convert from geodetic latitudes (using the current ellipsoid; see PROJ_ELLIPSOID) to one  of  four
              different  auxiliary  latitudes  (longitudes  are  unaffected).  Choose  from authalic, conformal,
              geocentric, and meridional latitudes [geocentric]. Use -I to convert from auxiliary  latitudes  to
              geodetic latitudes.

       -Q[d|e List all projection parameters. To only list datums, use -Qd. To only list ellipsoids, use -Qe.

       -S     Suppress points that fall outside the region.

       -T[h]from[/to]
              Coordinate  conversions  between  datums from and to using the standard Molodensky transformation.
              Use -Th if 3rd input column has height above ellipsoid [Default assumes height = 0, i.e.,  on  the
              ellipsoid]. Specify datums using the datum ID (see -Qd) or give ellipsoid:dx,dy,dz where ellipsoid
              may be an ellipsoid ID (see -Qe) or given as a[,inv_f], where a is the semi-major axis  and  inv_f
              is  the  inverse flattening (0 if omitted). If datum is - or not given we assume WGS-84. -T may be
              used in conjunction with -R -J to change the datum before coordinate projection (add -I  to  apply
              the  datum  conversion after the inverse projection). Make sure that the PROJ_ELLIPSOID setting is
              correct for your case.

       -V[level] (more …)
              Select verbosity level [c].

       -W[w|h]
              Prints map width and height on standard output.  No input files are  read.   To  only  output  the
              width  or the height, append w or h, respectively.  The units of the dimensions may be changed via
              -D.

       -Z[speed][+a][+i][+f][+tepoch]
              Calculate travel times along track as specified with -G.  Append a constant speed unit; if missing
              we  expect  to  read  a variable speed from column 3.  The speed is expected to be in the distance
              units set via -G per time unit controlled by TIME_UNIT [m/s].  Append  +i  to  output  incremental
              travel times between successive points, +a to obtain accumulated travel times, or both to get both
              kinds of time information.  Use +f to format the accumulated (elapsed) travel  time  according  to
              the  ISO  8601 convention.  As for the number of decimals used to represent seconds we consult the
              FORMAT_CLOCK_OUT setting. Finally, append +tepoch to report absolute times  (ETA)  for  successive
              points.

       -bi[ncols][t] (more …)
              Select native binary input. [Default is 2 input columns].

       -bo[ncols][type] (more …)
              Select native binary output. [Default is same as input].

       -d[i|o]nodata (more …)
              Replace input columns that equal nodata with NaN and do the reverse on output.

       -e[~]”pattern” | -e[~]/regexp/[i] (more …)
              Only accept data records that match the given pattern.

       -f[i|o]colinfo (more …)
              Specify data types of input and/or output columns.

       -g[a]x|y|d|X|Y|D|[col]z[+|-]gap[u] (more …)
              Determine data gaps and line breaks.

       -h[i|o][n][+c][+d][+rremark][+rtitle] (more …)
              Skip or produce header record(s).

       -icols[+l][+sscale][+ooffset][,] (more …)
              Select input columns and transformations (0 is first column).

       -ocols[,…] (more …)
              Select output columns (0 is first column).

       -p[x|y|z]azim[/elev[/zlevel]][+wlon0/lat0[/z0]][+vx0/y0] (more …)
              Select perspective view.

       -s[cols][a|r] (more …)
              Set handling of NaN records.

       -:[i|o] (more …)
              Swap 1st and 2nd column on input and/or output.

       -^ or just -
              Print a short message about the syntax of the command, then exits (NOTE: on Windows just use -).

       -+ or just +
              Print  an  extensive usage (help) message, including the explanation of any module-specific option
              (but not the GMT common options), then exits.

       -? or no arguments
              Print a complete usage (help) message, including the explanation of all options, then exits.

UNITS

       For map distance unit, append unit d for arc degree, m for arc minute, and s for arc  second,  or  e  for
       meter [Default], f for foot, k for km, M for statute mile, n for nautical mile, and u for US survey foot.
       By default we compute such distances using a spherical approximation with great circles. Prepend -  to  a
       distance  (or  the  unit  is no distance is given) to perform “Flat Earth” calculations (quicker but less
       accurate) or prepend + to perform exact geodesic calculations (slower but more accurate).

ASCII FORMAT PRECISION

       The ASCII output formats of numerical data are controlled by parameters in your gmt.conf file.  Longitude
       and  latitude  are  formatted  according  to  FORMAT_GEO_OUT,  absolute  time  is  under  the  control of
       FORMAT_DATE_OUT and FORMAT_CLOCK_OUT, whereas general floating point values are  formatted  according  to
       FORMAT_FLOAT_OUT. Be aware that the format in effect can lead to loss of precision in ASCII output, which
       can lead to various problems downstream. If you find the output is not  written  with  enough  precision,
       consider   switching   to   binary  output  (-bo  if  available)  or  specify  more  decimals  using  the
       FORMAT_FLOAT_OUT setting.

EXAMPLES

       To convert UTM coordinates in meters to geographic locations, given a file utm.txt and  knowing  the  UTM
       zone (and zone or hemisphere), try

              gmt mapproject utm.txt -Ju+11/1:1 -C -I -F

       To  transform  a file with (longitude,latitude) into (x,y) positions in cm on a Mercator grid for a given
       scale of 0.5 cm per degree, run

              gmt mapproject lonlatfile -R20/50/12/25 -Jm0.5c > xyfile

       To transform several 2-column, binary,  double  precision  files  with  (latitude,longitude)  into  (x,y)
       positions in inch on a Transverse Mercator grid (central longitude 75W) for scale = 1:500000 and suppress
       those points that would fall outside the map area, run

              gmt mapproject tracks.* -R-80/-70/20/40 -Jt-75/1:500000 -: -S -Di -bo -bi2 > tmfile.b

       To convert the geodetic coordinates (lon, lat, height) in the file old.dat from  the  NAD27  CONUS  datum
       (Datum ID 131 which uses the Clarke-1866 ellipsoid) to WGS 84, run

              gmt mapproject old.dat -Th131 > new.dat

       To  compute  the  closest  distance  (in km) between each point in the input file quakes.dat and the line
       segments given in the multisegment ASCII file coastline.xy, run

              gmt mapproject quakes.dat -Lcoastline.xy+uk > quake_dist.dat

       Given a file with longitude and latitude, compute both incremental and accumulated distance along  track,
       and estimate travel times assuming a fixed speed of 12 knots.  We do this with

              gmt mapproject track.txt -Gn+a+i -Z12+a --TIME_UNIT=h > elapsed_time.txt

       where  TIME_UNIT  is  set  to  hour  so  that  the  speed  is measured in nm (set by -G) per hour (set by
       TIME_UNIT).  Elapsed times will be reported in hours (unless +f is added to -Z for ISO elapsed time).

RESTRICTIONS

       The rectangular input region set with -R will in general be mapped into a non-rectangular grid. Unless -C
       is set, the leftmost point on this grid has xvalue = 0.0, and the lowermost point will have yvalue = 0.0.
       Thus, before you digitize a map, run the extreme map coordinates through mapproject using the appropriate
       scale  and see what (x,y) values they are mapped onto. Use these values when setting up for digitizing in
       order to have the inverse transformation work correctly, or alternatively, use awk to scale and shift the
       (x,y) values before transforming.

       For some projection, a spherical solution may be used despite the user having selected an ellipsoid. This
       occurs when the users -R setting implies a region that exceeds the domain in which the ellipsoidal series
       expansions  are  valid.  These are the conditions: (1) Lambert Conformal Conic (-JL)and Albers Equal-Area
       (-JB) will use the spherical solution when the map scale exceeds 1.0E7. (2) Transverse Mercator (-JT) and
       UTM  (-JU) will will use the spherical solution when either the west or east boundary given in -R is more
       than 10 degrees from the central meridian, and (3) same for Cassini (-JC) but with  a  limit  of  only  4
       degrees.

ELLIPSOIDS AND SPHEROIDS

       GMT  will use ellipsoidal formulae if they are implemented and the user have selected an ellipsoid as the
       reference shape (see PROJ_ELLIPSOID). The user needs to be aware of a few  potential  pitfalls:  (1)  For
       some  projections,  such  as  Transverse  Mercator,  Albers,  and  Lambert’s  conformal  conic we use the
       ellipsoidal expressions when the areas mapped are small, and switch to  the  spherical  expressions  (and
       substituting  the  appropriate auxiliary latitudes) for larger maps. The ellipsoidal formulae are used as
       follows: (a) Transverse Mercator: When all points are within 10 degrees of central  meridian,  (b)  Conic
       projections  when  longitudinal range is less than 90 degrees, (c) Cassini projection when all points are
       within 4 degrees of central meridian. (2) When you are  trying  to  match  some  historical  data  (e.g.,
       coordinates  obtained  with a certain projection and a certain reference ellipsoid) you may find that GMT
       gives results that are slightly different. One likely source of this mismatch is that older  calculations
       often  used  less significant digits. For instance, Snyder’s examples often use the Clarke 1866 ellipsoid
       (defined by him as having a flattening f = 1/294.98). From f  we  get  the  eccentricity  squared  to  be
       0.00676862818  (this  is what GMT uses), while Snyder rounds off and uses 0.00676866. This difference can
       give discrepancies of several tens of cm. If you  need  to  reproduce  coordinates  projected  with  this
       slightly different eccentricity, you should specify your own ellipsoid with the same parameters as Clarke
       1866, but with f = 1/294.97861076. Also, be aware that older data may be referenced to different  datums,
       and  unless  you  know  which  datum  was  used and convert all data to a common datum you may experience
       mismatches of tens to hundreds of meters. (3) Finally,  be  aware  that  PROJ_SCALE_FACTOR  have  certain
       default  values  for  some  projections so you may have to override the setting in order to match results
       produced with other settings.

OUTPUT ORDER

       The production order for the geodetic and temporal columns produced by the options -A, -G, -L, and -Z  is
       fixed  and  follows  the alphabetical order of the options.  Hence, the order these options appear on the
       command line is irrelevant.  The actual output order can of course be modulated via -o.

SEE ALSO

       gmt, gmt.conf, gmtvector, project

REFERENCES

       Bomford, G., 1952, Geodesy, Oxford U. Press.

       Snyder, J. P., 1987, Map Projections - A Working Manual, U.S. Geological Survey Prof. Paper 1395.

       Vanicek, P. and Krakiwsky, E, 1982, Geodesy - The Concepts, North-Holland Publ., ISBN: 0 444 86149 1.

       2018, P. Wessel, W. H. F. Smith, R. Scharroo, J. Luis, and F. Wobbe