bionic (1) splat.1.gz

Provided by: splat_1.4.0-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       splat An RF Signal Propagation, Loss, And Terrain analysis tool

SYNOPSIS

       splat  [-t   transmitter_site.qth] [-r receiver_site.qth] [-c rx antenna height for LOS coverage analysis
       (feet/meters) (float)] [-L rx antenna  height  for  ITM  coverage  analysis  (feet/meters)  (float)]  [-p
       terrain_profile.ext]       [-e       elevation_profile.ext]       [-h       height_profile.ext]       [-H
       normalized_height_profile.ext]    [-l    ITM_profile.ext]    [-o    topographic_map_filename.ppm]     [-b
       cartographic_boundary_filename.dat]  [-s site/city_database.dat] [-d sdf_directory_path] [-m earth radius
       multiplier (float)] [-f frequency (MHz) for Fresnel  zone  calculations  (float)]  [-R  maximum  coverage
       radius  (miles/kilometers)  (float)]  [-dB  threshold  beyond  which contours will not be displayed] [-gc
       ground clutter height (feet/meters) (float)] [-fz Fresnel zone clearance percentage (default = 60)] [-ano
       alphanumeric  output  file name] [-ani alphanumeric input file name] [-udt user_defined_terrain_file.dat]
       [-n] [-N] [-nf] [-sc] [-dbm] [-ngs] [-geo] [-kml] [-gpsav] [-metric] [-olditm]

DESCRIPTION

       SPLAT! is a powerful terrestrial RF propagation and terrain analysis tool for the spectrum between 20 MHz
       and 20 GHz.  SPLAT! is free software, and is designed for operation on Unix and Linux-based workstations.
       Redistribution and/or modification is permitted under the  terms  of  the  GNU  General  Public  License,
       Version  2, as published by the Free Software Foundation.  Adoption of SPLAT!  source code in proprietary
       or closed-source applications is a violation of this license and is strictly forbidden.

       SPLAT! is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT  ANY  WARRANTY,  without  even  the
       implied  warranty  of  MERCHANTABILITY  or  FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public
       License for more details.

INTRODUCTION

       Applications of SPLAT! include the visualization, design, and link budget analysis of wireless Wide  Area
       Networks  (WANs),  commercial  and  amateur  radio  communication  systems above 20 MHz, microwave links,
       frequency coordination and interference studies, and the prediction of  analog  and  digital  terrestrial
       radio and television contour regions.

       SPLAT!  provides  RF  site  engineering  data  such as great circle distances and bearings between sites,
       antenna elevation angles (uptilt), depression angles (downtilt), antenna height  above  mean  sea  level,
       antenna  height  above  average  terrain,  bearings,  distances,  and  elevations  to known obstructions,
       Irregular Terrain Model path attenuation, and received signal strength.  In addition, the minimum antenna
       height requirements needed to clear terrain, the first Fresnel zone, and any user-definable percentage of
       the first Fresnel zone are also provided.

       SPLAT! produces reports, graphs, and high resolution topographic maps that  depict  line-of-sight  paths,
       and regional path loss and signal strength contours through which expected coverage areas of transmitters
       and repeater systems can be obtained.  When performing line-of-sight and Irregular Terrain Model analyses
       in situations where multiple transmitter or repeater sites are employed, SPLAT! determines individual and
       mutual areas of coverage within the network specified.

INPUT FILES

       SPLAT! is a command-line driven application and reads input data through a number of  data  files.   Some
       files  are mandatory for successful execution of the program, while others are optional.  Mandatory files
       include digital elevation topography models in the form of SPLAT Data Files (SDF  files),  site  location
       files  (QTH files), and Irregular Terrain Model parameter files (LRP files).  Optional files include city
       location files, cartographic boundary files, user-defined terrain files, path loss input  files,  antenna
       radiation pattern files, and color definition files.

SPLAT DATA FILES

       SPLAT!  imports  topographic  data  in the form of SPLAT Data Files (SDFs).  These files may be generated
       from a number of information sources.  In the United States, SPLAT Data Files can  be  generated  through
       U.S.   Geological  Survey  Digital  Elevation Models (DEMs) using the postdownload and usgs2sdf utilities
       included with SPLAT!.  USGS Digital Elevation Models compatible with these utilities  may  be  downloaded
       from: http://edcftp.cr.usgs.gov/pub/data/DEM/250/.

       Significantly  better  resolution  and accuracy can be obtained through the use of SRTM Version 2 digital
       elevation models, especially when supplemented by USGS-derived SDF data.  These one-degree by  one-degree
       models  are  the product of the Space Shuttle STS-99 Radar Topography Mission, and are available for most
       populated regions of the Earth.  SPLAT Data Files may be generated from 3 arc-second  SRTM-3  data  using
       the  included  srtm2sdf  utility.   SRTM-3  Version  2  data  may be obtained through anonymous FTP from:
       ftp://e0srp01u.ecs.nasa.gov:21/srtm/version2/SRTM3/

       Note that SRTM filenames refer to the latitude and longitude of the southwest corner of  the  topographic
       dataset  contained  within  the  file.   Therefore, the region of interest must lie north and east of the
       latitude and longitude provided in the SRTM filename.

       The srtm2sdf utility may also be used to convert 3-arc second SRTM  data  in  Band  Interleaved  by  Line
       (.BIL)    format    for    use    with    SPLAT!.    This   data   is   available   via   the   web   at:
       http://seamless.usgs.gov/website/seamless/

       Band Interleaved by Line data must be downloaded in a very specific manner to be compatible with srtm2sdf
       and  SPLAT!.   Please  consult  srtm2sdf's documentation for instructions on downloading .BIL topographic
       data through the USGS's Seamless Web Site.

       Even greater resolution and accuracy can be obtained by using 1 arc-second SRTM-1  Version  2  topography
       data.   This  data  is  available  for  the United States and its territories and possessions, and may be
       downloaded from: ftp://e0srp01u.ecs.nasa.gov:21/srtm/version2/SRTM1/

       High resolution SDF files for use with SPLAT! HD may be generated from data  in  this  format  using  the
       srtm2sdf-hd utility.

       Despite  the  higher accuracy that SRTM data has to offer, some voids in the data sets exist.  When voids
       are detected, the srtm2sdf and srtm2sdf-hd utilities  replace  them  with  corresponding  data  found  in
       usgs2sdf  generated  SDF  files.   If  USGS-derived  SDF data is not available, voids are handled through
       adjacent pixel averaging, or direct replacement.

       SPLAT Data Files contain integer value topographic elevations in meters referenced to mean sea level  for
       1-degree  by  1-degree  regions  of the Earth.  SDF files can be read by SPLAT! in either standard format
       (.sdf) as generated directly by the usgs2sdf, srtm2sdf, and srtm2sdf-hd utilities, or in bzip2 compressed
       format  (.sdf.bz2).   Since  uncompressed  files  can  be  read slightly faster than files that have been
       compressed, SPLAT! searches for needed SDF data in  uncompressed  format  first.   If  uncompressed  data
       cannot  be located, SPLAT! then searches for data in bzip2 compressed format.  If no compressed SDF files
       can be found for the region requested, SPLAT! assumes the region  is  over  water,  and  will  assign  an
       elevation of sea-level to these areas.

       This  feature  of  SPLAT! makes it possible to perform path analysis not only over land, but also between
       coastal areas not represented by  Digital  Elevation  Model  data.   However,  this  behavior  of  SPLAT!
       underscores  the  importance  of  having  all  the  SDF  files  required for the region being analyzed if
       meaningful results are to be expected.

SITE LOCATION (QTH) FILES

       SPLAT! imports site location information of transmitter and receiver sites analyzed by the  program  from
       ASCII files having a .qth extension.  QTH files contain the site's name, the site's latitude (positive if
       North of the equator, negative if South), the site's longitude (in degrees West, 0  to  360  degrees,  or
       degrees  East  0 to -360 degrees), and the site's antenna height above ground level (AGL), each separated
       by a single line-feed character.  The antenna height is assumed to be specified in feet  unless  followed
       by the letter m or the word meters in either upper or lower case.  Latitude and longitude information may
       be expressed in either decimal format (74.6864) or degree, minute, second (DMS) format (74 41 11.0).

       For example, a site location file describing television station WNJT-DT, Trenton, NJ (wnjt-dt.qth)  might
       read as follows:

               WNJT-DT
               40.2828
               74.6864
               990.00

       Each  transmitter and receiver site analyzed by SPLAT! must be represented by its own site location (QTH)
       file.

IRREGULAR TERRAIN MODEL PARAMETER (LRP) FILES

       Irregular Terrain Model Parameter data files are required for SPLAT!  to determine RF  path  loss,  field
       strength,  or  received  signal  power level in either point-to-point or area prediction mode.  Irregular
       Terrain Model parameter data is read from files having the same base name as  the  transmitter  site  QTH
       file, but with a .lrp extension.  SPLAT! LRP files share the following format (wnjt-dt.lrp):

               15.000  ; Earth Dielectric Constant (Relative permittivity)
               0.005   ; Earth Conductivity (Siemens per meter)
               301.000 ; Atmospheric Bending Constant (N-units)
               647.000 ; Frequency in MHz (20 MHz to 20 GHz)
               5       ; Radio Climate (5 = Continental Temperate)
               0       ; Polarization (0 = Horizontal, 1 = Vertical)
               0.50    ; Fraction of situations (50% of locations)
               0.90    ; Fraction of time (90% of the time)
               46000.0 ; Effective Radiated Power (ERP) in Watts (optional)

       If  an  LRP  file corresponding to the tx_site QTH file cannot be found, SPLAT! scans the current working
       directory for the file "splat.lrp".  If this file cannot  be  found,  then  default  parameters  will  be
       assigned  by  SPLAT!  and  a  corresponding  "splat.lrp" file containing these default parameters will be
       written to the current working directory.  The generated "splat.lrp" file can then be edited by the  user
       as needed.

       Typical Earth dielectric constants and conductivity values are as follows:
                                  Dielectric Constant  Conductivity
               Salt water       :        80                5.000
               Good ground      :        25                0.020
               Fresh water      :        80                0.010
               Marshy land      :        12                0.007
               Farmland, forest :        15                0.005
               Average ground   :        15                0.005
               Mountain, sand   :        13                0.002
               City             :         5                0.001
               Poor ground      :         4                0.001

       Radio climate codes used by SPLAT! are as follows:

               1: Equatorial (Congo)
               2: Continental Subtropical (Sudan)
               3: Maritime Subtropical (West coast of Africa)
               4: Desert (Sahara)
               5: Continental Temperate
               6: Maritime Temperate, over land (UK and west coasts of US & EU)
               7: Maritime Temperate, over sea

       The  Continental  Temperate  climate  is  common  to large land masses in the temperate zone, such as the
       United States.  For paths shorter than 100  km,  there  is  little  difference  between  Continental  and
       Maritime Temperate climates.

       The seventh and eighth parameters in the .lrp file correspond to the statistical analysis provided by the
       ITM model.  In this example, SPLAT! will return the maximum path loss occurring 50% of the time (fraction
       of  time,  or  Time  Variability) in 90% of situations (fraction of situations, or Location Variability).
       This is often denoted as F(50,90) in Longley-Rice studies.  In the United States, an F(50,90) criteria is
       typically  used  for digital television (8-level VSB modulation), while F(50,50) is used for analog (VSB-
       AM+NTSC) broadcasts.

       For   further   information    on    ITM    propagation    model    parameters,    please    refer    to:
       http://flattop.its.bldrdoc.gov/itm.html                                                               and
       http://www.softwright.com/faq/engineering/prop_longley_rice.html

       The last parameter in the .lrp file corresponds to the transmitter's Effective Radiated Power (ERP),  and
       is  optional.   If  it  is  included  in the .lrp file, then SPLAT! will compute received signal strength
       levels and field strength level contours when performing ITM studies.  If the parameter is omitted,  path
       loss  is  computed  instead.   The ERP provided in the .lrp file can be overridden by using SPLAT!'s -erp
       command-line switch.  If the .lrp file contains an ERP parameter and the generation of path  loss  rather
       than  field  strength  contours is desired, the ERP can be assigned to zero using the -erp switch without
       having to edit the .lrp file to accomplish the same result.

CITY LOCATION FILES

       The names and locations of cities, tower sites, or other points of interest may be imported  and  plotted
       on  topographic  maps  generated  by SPLAT!.  SPLAT! imports the names of cities and locations from ASCII
       files containing the location of interest's name, latitude, and longitude.  Each field is separated by  a
       comma.   Each  record is separated by a single line feed character.  As was the case with the .qth files,
       latitude and longitude information may be entered in either  decimal  or  degree,  minute,  second  (DMS)
       format.

       For example (cities.dat):

               Teaneck, 40.891973, 74.014506
               Tenafly, 40.919212, 73.955892
               Teterboro, 40.859511, 74.058908
               Tinton Falls, 40.279966, 74.093924
               Toms River, 39.977777, 74.183580
               Totowa, 40.906160, 74.223310
               Trenton, 40.219922, 74.754665

       A  total of five separate city data files may be imported at a time, and there is no limit to the size of
       these files.  SPLAT! reads city data on a "first come/first served" basis, and plots only those locations
       whose  annotations  do  not  conflict with annotations of locations read earlier in the current city data
       file, or in previous files.  This behavior minimizes clutter in SPLAT! generated  topographic  maps,  but
       also  mandates  that  important locations be placed toward the beginning of the first city data file, and
       locations less important be positioned further down the list or in subsequent data files.

       City data files may be generated manually using any text editor, imported from other sources, or  derived
       from data available from the U.S. Census Bureau using the citydecoder utility included with SPLAT!.  Such
       data is available free of charge via the Internet  at:  http://www.census.gov/geo/www/cob/bdy_files.html,
       and must be in ASCII format.

CARTOGRAPHIC BOUNDARY DATA FILES

       Cartographic  boundary data may also be imported to plot the boundaries of cities, counties, or states on
       topographic maps generated by SPLAT!.  Such data must be  of  the  form  of  ARC/INFO  Ungenerate  (ASCII
       Format)  Metadata  Cartographic  Boundary  Files,  and are available from the U.S.  Census Bureau via the
       Internet             at:             http://www.census.gov/geo/www/cob/co2000.html#ascii              and
       http://www.census.gov/geo/www/cob/pl2000.html#ascii.   A  total  of  five  separate cartographic boundary
       files may be imported at a time.  It is not necessary to import state  boundaries  if  county  boundaries
       have already been imported.

PROGRAM OPERATION

       SPLAT!  is  invoked via the command-line using a series of switches and arguments.  Since SPLAT! is a CPU
       and memory intensive application, this type of interface minimizes overhead  and  lends  itself  well  to
       scripted (batch) operations.  SPLAT!'s CPU and memory scheduling priority may be modified through the use
       of the Unix nice command.

       The number and type of switches passed to SPLAT! determine its mode of operation  and  method  of  output
       data  generation.   Nearly all of SPLAT!'s switches may be cascaded in any order on the command line when
       invoking the program.

       Simply typing splat on the command line will return a summary of SPLAT!'s command line options:

                    --==[ SPLAT! v1.4.0 Available Options... ]==--

            -t txsite(s).qth (max of 4 with -c, max of 30 with -L)
            -r rxsite.qth
            -c plot coverage of TX(s) with an RX antenna at X feet/meters AGL
            -L plot path loss map of TX based on an RX at X feet/meters AGL
            -s filename(s) of city/site file(s) to import (5 max)
            -b filename(s) of cartographic boundary file(s) to import (5 max)
            -p filename of terrain profile graph to plot
            -e filename of terrain elevation graph to plot
            -h filename of terrain height graph to plot
            -H filename of normalized terrain height graph to plot
            -l filename of path loss graph to plot
            -o filename of topographic map to generate (.ppm)
            -u filename of user-defined terrain file to import
            -d sdf file directory path (overrides path in ~/.splat_path file)
            -m earth radius multiplier
            -n do not plot LOS paths in .ppm maps
            -N do not produce unnecessary site or obstruction reports
            -f frequency for Fresnel zone calculation (MHz)
            -R modify default range for -c or -L (miles/kilometers)
           -sc display smooth rather than quantized contour levels
           -db threshold beyond which contours will not be displayed
           -nf do not plot Fresnel zones in height plots
           -fz Fresnel zone clearance percentage (default = 60)
           -gc ground clutter height (feet/meters)
          -ngs display greyscale topography as white in .ppm files
          -erp override ERP in .lrp file (Watts)
          -ano name of alphanumeric output file
          -ani name of alphanumeric input file
          -udt filename of user defined terrain input file
          -kml generate Google Earth (.kml) compatible output
          -geo generate an Xastir .geo georeference file (with .ppm output)
          -dbm plot signal power level contours rather than field strength
        -gpsav preserve gnuplot temporary working files after SPLAT! execution -metric employ metric rather than
       imperial units for all user I/O -olditm invoke older ITM propagation model rather than the newer ITWOM

       The command-line options for splat and splat-hd are identical.

       SPLAT!  operates in two distinct modes: point-to-point mode, and area prediction mode.  Either a line-of-
       sight (LOS) or Irregular Terrain (ITM) propagation model may be invoked by the user.  True  Earth,  four-
       thirds  Earth,  or  any  other  user-defined  Earth radius may be specified when performing line-of-sight
       analysis.

POINT-TO-POINT ANALYSIS

       SPLAT! may be used to perform line-of-sight terrain analysis between two specified site  locations.   For
       example:

       splat -t tx_site.qth -r rx_site.qth

       invokes  a  line-of-sight  terrain analysis between the transmitter specified in tx_site.qth and receiver
       specified in rx_site.qth using a True Earth radius model, and writes a SPLAT! Path Analysis Report to the
       current  working  directory.   The  report  contains  details  of the transmitter and receiver sites, and
       identifies the location of any obstructions detected along the line-of-sight path.  If an obstruction can
       be cleared by raising the receive antenna to a greater altitude, SPLAT! will indicate the minimum antenna
       height required for a line-of-sight  path  to  exist  between  the  transmitter  and  receiver  locations
       specified.   Note  that  imperial units (miles, feet) are specified unless the -metric switch is added to
       SPLAT!'s command line options:

       splat -t tx_site.qth -r rx_site.qth -metric

       If the antenna must be raised a significant amount, this determination may take a few moments.  Note that
       the results provided are the minimum necessary for a line-of-sight path to exist, and in the case of this
       simple example, do not take Fresnel zone clearance requirements into consideration.

       qth extensions are assumed by SPLAT! for QTH files, and are optional when specifying -t and -r  arguments
       on  the  command-line.   SPLAT! automatically reads all SPLAT Data Files necessary to conduct the terrain
       analysis between the sites specified.  SPLAT!  searches for the required SDF files in the current working
       directory first.  If the needed files are not found, SPLAT! then searches in the path specified by the -d
       command-line switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -d /cdrom/sdf/

       An external directory path may be specified by  placing  a  ".splat_path"  file  under  the  user's  home
       directory.  This file must contain the full directory path of last resort to all the SDF files.  The path
       in the $HOME/.splat_path file must be of the form of a single line of ASCII text:

       /opt/splat/sdf/

       and can be generated using any text editor.

       A graph of the terrain profile between the receiver and transmitter locations as a function  of  distance
       from the receiver can be generated by adding the -p switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -p terrain_profile.png

       SPLAT! invokes gnuplot when generating graphs.  The filename extension specified to SPLAT! determines the
       format of the graph produced.  .png will  produce  a  640x480  color  PNG  graphic  file,  while  .ps  or
       .postscript  will  produce  postscript output.  Output in formats such as GIF, Adobe Illustrator, AutoCAD
       dxf, LaTeX, and many others are available.  Please  consult  gnuplot,  and  gnuplot's  documentation  for
       details on all the supported output formats.

       A  graph  of  elevations  subtended  by the terrain between the receiver and transmitter as a function of
       distance from the receiver can be generated by using the -e switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -e elevation_profile.png

       The graph produced using this switch illustrates the elevation and depression angles resulting  from  the
       terrain  between  the receiver's location and the transmitter site from the perspective of the receiver's
       location.  A second trace is plotted between the left side of the graph  (receiver's  location)  and  the
       location  of  the transmitting antenna on the right.  This trace illustrates the elevation angle required
       for a line-of-sight path to  exist  between  the  receiver  and  transmitter  locations.   If  the  trace
       intersects  the  elevation  profile at any point on the graph, then this is an indication that a line-of-
       sight path does not exist under the conditions given, and the obstructions can be clearly  identified  on
       the graph at the point(s) of intersection.

       A  graph  illustrating  terrain  height  referenced  to  a line-of-sight path between the transmitter and
       receiver may be generated using the -h switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -h height_profile.png

       A terrain height plot normalized to the transmitter and receiver antenna heights can  be  obtained  using
       the -H switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -H normalized_height_profile.png

       A contour of the Earth's curvature is also plotted in this mode.

       The first Fresnel Zone, and 60% of the first Fresnel Zone can be added to height profile graphs by adding
       the -f switch, and specifying a frequency (in MHz) at which the Fresnel Zone should be modeled:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -f 439.250 -H normalized_height_profile.png

       Fresnel Zone clearances other 60% can be specified using the -fz switch as follows:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -f 439.250 -fz 75 -H height_profile2.png

       A graph showing ITM path loss may be plotted using the -l switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -l path_loss_profile.png

       As before, adding the -metric switch forces the graphs to be plotted using metric units of measure.   The
       -gpsav  switch  instructs  SPLAT!  to  preserve  (rather than delete) the gnuplot working files generated
       during SPLAT! execution, allowing the user to edit these files and re-run gnuplot if desired.

       When performing a point-to-point analysis, a SPLAT! Path Analysis Report is generated in the  form  of  a
       text  file  with  a  .txt  filename  extension.   The  report contains bearings and distances between the
       transmitter and receiver, as well as the free-space and ITM path loss for the path being  analyzed.   The
       mode  of  propagation for the path is given as Line-of-Sight, Single Horizon, Double Horizon, Diffraction
       Dominant, or Troposcatter Dominant.  Additionally, if the receiver is located at the  peak  of  a  single
       obstruction or at the peak of a second obstruction, SPLAT! will report RX at Peak Terrain Along Path when
       operating under the ITWOM propagation model.

       Distances and locations to known obstructions along the path between transmitter and  receiver  are  also
       provided.   If the transmitter's effective radiated power is specified in the transmitter's corresponding
       .lrp file, then predicted signal strength and antenna voltage at the receiving location is also  provided
       in the Path Analysis Report.

       To  determine  the signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio at remote location where random Johnson (thermal) noise is
       the primary limiting factor in reception:

       SNR = T - NJ - L + G - NF

       where T is the ERP of the transmitter in dBW in the direction of the receiver, NJ is Johnson Noise in dBW
       (-136  dBW  for  a 6 MHz television channel), L is the path loss provided by SPLAT!  in dB (as a positive
       number), G is the receive antenna gain in dB over isotropic, and NF is the receiver noise figure in dB.

       T may be computed as follows:

       T = TI + GT

       where TI is actual amount of  RF  power  delivered  to  the  transmitting  antenna  in  dBW,  GT  is  the
       transmitting  antenna  gain  (over  isotropic)  in  the  direction of the receiver (or the horizon if the
       receiver is over the horizon).

       To compute how much more signal is available over the minimum to necessary to achieve a specific  signal-
       to-noise ratio:

       Signal_Margin = SNR - S

       where  S  is  the  minimum  required SNR ratio (15.5 dB for ATSC (8-level VSB) DTV, 42 dB for analog NTSC
       television).

       A topographic map may be generated by SPLAT! to visualize the path between the transmitter  and  receiver
       sites  from  yet  another  perspective.   Topographic maps generated by SPLAT! display elevations using a
       logarithmic grayscale, with higher elevations represented through brighter shades of gray.   The  dynamic
       range  of  the  image  is  scaled between the highest and lowest elevations present in the map.  The only
       exception to this is sea-level, which is represented using the color blue.

       Topographic output is invoked using the -o switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -o topo_map.ppm

       The .ppm extension on the output filename is assumed by SPLAT!, and is optional.

       In this example, topo_map.ppm will illustrate  the  locations  of  the  transmitter  and  receiver  sites
       specified.   In  addition,  the  great circle path between the two sites will be drawn over locations for
       which an unobstructed path exists to the transmitter at a receiving antenna height equal to that  of  the
       receiver site (specified in rx_site.qth).

       It  may  desirable  to  populate  the topographic map with names and locations of cities, tower sites, or
       other important locations.  A city file may be passed to SPLAT! using the -s switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -s cities.dat -o topo_map

       Up to five separate city files may be passed to SPLAT! at a time following the -s switch.

       County and state boundaries may be added to  the  map  by  specifying  up  to  five  U.S.  Census  Bureau
       cartographic boundary files using the -b switch:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -b co34_d00.dat -o topo_map

       In  situations  where multiple transmitter sites are in use, as many as four site locations may be passed
       to SPLAT! at a time for analysis:

       splat -t tx_site1 tx_site2 tx_site3 tx_site4 -r rx_site -p profile.png

       In this example, four separate terrain profiles and obstruction reports will be generated by  SPLAT!.   A
       single  topographic  map  can  be  specified  using  the  -o switch, and line-of-sight paths between each
       transmitter and the receiver site indicated will be produced on the map, each in its own color.  The path
       between  the  first  transmitter  specified to the receiver will be in green, the path between the second
       transmitter and the receiver will be in cyan, the path between the third  transmitter  and  the  receiver
       will be in violet, and the path between the fourth transmitter and the receiver will be in sienna.

       SPLAT! generated topographic maps are 24-bit TrueColor Portable PixMap (PPM) images.  They may be viewed,
       edited, or converted to other graphic formats by popular image viewing applications such as xv, The GIMP,
       ImageMagick,  and  XPaint.   PNG  format  is highly recommended for lossless compressed storage of SPLAT!
       generated topographic output files.  ImageMagick's command-line  utility  easily  converts  SPLAT!'s  PPM
       files to PNG format:

       convert splat_map.ppm splat_map.png

       Another      excellent      PPM      to     PNG     command-line     utility     is     available     at:
       http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/book/sources.html.  As a last resort, PPM files may be compressed using the
       bzip2 utility, and read directly by The GIMP in this format.

       The  -ngs option assigns all terrain to the color white, and can be used when it is desirable to generate
       a map that is devoid of terrain:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -b co34_d00.dat -ngs -o white_map

       The resulting .ppm image file can be converted  to  .png  format  with  a  transparent  background  using
       ImageMagick's convert utility:

       convert -transparent "#FFFFFF" white_map.ppm transparent_map.png

REGIONAL COVERAGE ANALYSIS

       SPLAT! can analyze a transmitter or repeater site, or network of sites, and predict the regional coverage
       for each site specified.  In this mode, SPLAT! can generate a topographic map  displaying  the  geometric
       line-of-sight  coverage  area  of  the sites based on the location of each site and the height of receive
       antenna wishing to communicate with the site in question.  A regional analysis may be performed by SPLAT!
       using the -c switch as follows:

       splat -t tx_site -c 30.0 -s cities.dat -b co34_d00.dat -o tx_coverage

       In this example, SPLAT! generates a topographic map called tx_coverage.ppm that illustrates the predicted
       line-of-sight regional coverage of tx_site to receiving locations having antennas 30.0 feet above  ground
       level (AGL).  If the -metric switch is used, the argument following the -c switch is interpreted as being
       in meters rather than in feet.   The  contents  of  cities.dat  are  plotted  on  the  map,  as  are  the
       cartographic boundaries contained in the file co34_d00.dat.

       When  plotting line-of-sight paths and areas of regional coverage, SPLAT! by default does not account for
       the effects of atmospheric bending.  However, this behavior may be modified by  using  the  Earth  radius
       multiplier (-m) switch:

       splat -t wnjt-dt -c 30.0 -m 1.333 -s cities.dat -b counties.dat -o map.ppm

       An  earth  radius  multiplier of 1.333 instructs SPLAT! to use the "four-thirds earth" model for line-of-
       sight propagation analysis.  Any appropriate earth radius multiplier may be selected by the user.

       When performing a regional analysis, SPLAT! generates a site report for each  station  analyzed.   SPLAT!
       site  reports  contain  details  of  the site's geographic location, its height above mean sea level, the
       antenna's height above mean sea level, the antenna's height above average terrain, and the height of  the
       average terrain calculated toward the bearings of 0, 45, 90, 135, 180, 225, 270, and 315 degrees azimuth.

DETERMINING MULTIPLE REGIONS OF LOS COVERAGE

       SPLAT!  can also display line-of-sight coverage areas for as many as four separate transmitter sites on a
       common topographic map.  For example:

       splat -t site1 site2 site3 site4 -c 10.0 -metric -o network.ppm

       plots the regional line-of-sight coverage of site1, site2, site3, and site4 based on  a  receive  antenna
       located  10.0 meters above ground level.  A topographic map is then written to the file network.ppm.  The
       line-of-sight coverage area of the transmitters are plotted as follows in  the  colors  indicated  (along
       with their corresponding RGB values in decimal):

           site1: Green (0,255,0)
           site2: Cyan (0,255,255)
           site3: Medium Violet (147,112,219)
           site4: Sienna 1 (255,130,71)

           site1 + site2: Yellow (255,255,0)
           site1 + site3: Pink (255,192,203)
           site1 + site4: Green Yellow (173,255,47)
           site2 + site3: Orange (255,165,0)
           site2 + site4: Dark Sea Green 1 (193,255,193)
           site3 + site4: Dark Turquoise (0,206,209)

           site1 + site2 + site3: Dark Green (0,100,0)
           site1 + site2 + site4: Blanched Almond (255,235,205)
           site1 + site3 + site4: Medium Spring Green (0,250,154)
           site2 + site3 + site4: Tan (210,180,140)

           site1 + site2 + site3 + site4: Gold2 (238,201,0)

       If  separate  .qth  files are generated, each representing a common site location but a different antenna
       height, a single topographic map illustrating the  regional  coverage  from  as  many  as  four  separate
       locations on a single tower may be generated by SPLAT!.

PATH LOSS ANALYSIS

       If  the  -c  switch  is  replaced  by  a  -L  switch,  an ITM path loss map for a transmitter site may be
       generated:

       splat -t wnjt -L 30.0 -s cities.dat -b co34_d00.dat -o path_loss_map

       In this mode, SPLAT! generates a multi-color map illustrating expected signal levels in areas surrounding
       the  transmitter site.  A legend at the bottom of the map correlates each color with a specific path loss
       range in decibels.

       The -db switch allows a threshold to be set beyond which contours will not be plotted on  the  map.   For
       example,  if  a  path loss beyond -140 dB is irrelevant to the survey being conducted, SPLAT!'s path loss
       plot can be constrained to the region bounded by the 140 dB attenuation contour as follows:

       splat -t wnjt-dt -L 30.0 -s cities.dat -b co34_d00.dat -db 140 -o plot.ppm

       The path loss contour threshold may be expressed as either a positive or negative quantity.

       The path loss analysis range may be modified to a  user-specific  distance  using  the  -R  switch.   The
       argument must be given in miles (or kilometers if the -metric switch is used).  If a range wider than the
       generated topographic map is specified, SPLAT! will perform ITM path loss calculations between  all  four
       corners of the area prediction map.

       The  colors  used  to illustrate contour regions in SPLAT! generated coverage maps may be tailored by the
       user by creating or modifying SPLAT!'s color definition files.  SPLAT! color definition  files  have  the
       same  base  name  as  the  transmitter's  .qth  file,  but carry .lcf, .scf, and .dcf extensions.  If the
       necessary file does not exist in the current working when SPLAT!  is run, a file containing default color
       definition  parameters  that  is  suitable  for  manual  editing  by the user is written into the current
       directory.

       When a regional ITM analysis is performed and the transmitter's ERP is not specified or is zero,  a  .lcf
       path  loss  color definition file corresponding to the transmitter site (.qth) is read by SPLAT! from the
       current working directory.  If a .lcf file corresponding to the transmitter site is  not  found,  then  a
       default file suitable for manual editing by the user is automatically generated by SPLAT!.

       A path loss color definition file possesses the following structure (wnjt-dt.lcf):

        ; SPLAT! Auto-generated Path-Loss Color Definition ("wnjt-dt.lcf") File
        ;
        ; Format for the parameters held in this file is as follows:
        ;
        ;    dB: red, green, blue
        ;
        ; ...where "dB" is the path loss (in dB) and
        ; "red", "green", and "blue" are the corresponding RGB color
        ; definitions ranging from 0 to 255 for the region specified.
        ;
        ; The following parameters may be edited and/or expanded
        ; for future runs of SPLAT!  A total of 32 contour regions
        ; may be defined in this file.
        ;
        ;
         80: 255,   0,   0
         90: 255, 128,   0
        100: 255, 165,   0
        110: 255, 206,   0
        120: 255, 255,   0
        130: 184, 255,   0
        140:   0, 255,   0
        150:   0, 208,   0
        160:   0, 196, 196
        170:   0, 148, 255
        180:  80,  80, 255
        190:   0,  38, 255
        200: 142,  63, 255
        210: 196,  54, 255
        220: 255,   0, 255
        230: 255, 194, 204

       If  the  path loss is less than 80 dB, the color Red (RGB = 255, 0, 0) is assigned to the region.  If the
       path loss is greater than or equal to 80 dB, but less than 90 db, then  Dark  Orange  (255,  128,  0)  is
       assigned  to  the region.  Orange (255, 165, 0) is assigned to regions having a path loss greater than or
       equal to 90 dB, but less than 100 dB, and so on.  Greyscale terrain is displayed beyond the 230  dB  path
       loss  contour.  Adding the -sc switch will smooth the transitions between the specified quantized contour
       levels.

FIELD STRENGTH ANALYSIS

       If the transmitter's effective radiated power (ERP) is specified  in  the  transmitter's  .lrp  file,  or
       expressed  on the command-line using the -erp switch, field strength contours referenced to decibels over
       one microvolt per meter (dBuV/m) rather than path loss are produced:

       splat -t wnjt-dt -L 30.0 -erp 46000 -db 30 -o plot.ppm

       The -db switch can be used in this mode as before to limit the extent to which  field  strength  contours
       are  plotted.  When plotting field strength contours, however, the argument given is interpreted as being
       expressed in dBuV/m.

       SPLAT! field strength color definition files share a very  similar  structure  to  .lcf  files  used  for
       plotting path loss:

        ; SPLAT! Auto-generated Signal Color Definition ("wnjt-dt.scf") File
        ;
        ; Format for the parameters held in this file is as follows:
        ;
        ;    dBuV/m: red, green, blue
        ;
        ; ...where "dBuV/m" is the signal strength (in dBuV/m) and
        ; "red", "green", and "blue" are the corresponding RGB color
        ; definitions ranging from 0 to 255 for the region specified.
        ;
        ; The following parameters may be edited and/or expanded
        ; for future runs of SPLAT!  A total of 32 contour regions
        ; may be defined in this file.
        ;
        ;
        128: 255,   0,   0
        118: 255, 165,   0
        108: 255, 206,   0
         98: 255, 255,   0
         88: 184, 255,   0
         78:   0, 255,   0
         68:   0, 208,   0
         58:   0, 196, 196
         48:   0, 148, 255
         38:  80,  80, 255
         28:   0,  38, 255
         18: 142,  63, 255
          8: 140,   0, 128

       If  the signal strength is greater than or equal to 128 dB over 1 microvolt per meter (dBuV/m), the color
       Red (255, 0, 0) is displayed for the region.  If the signal strength is greater  than  or  equal  to  118
       dBuV/m, but less than 128 dBuV/m, then the color Orange (255, 165, 0) is displayed, and so on.  Greyscale
       terrain is displayed for regions with signal strengths less than 8 dBuV/m.

       Signal strength contours for some common VHF and UHF broadcasting services in the United  States  are  as
       follows:

              Analog Television Broadcasting
              ------------------------------
              Channels 2-6:       City Grade: >= 74 dBuV/m
                                     Grade A: >= 68 dBuV/m
                                     Grade B: >= 47 dBuV/m
              --------------------------------------------
              Channels 7-13:      City Grade: >= 77 dBuV/m
                                     Grade A: >= 71 dBuV/m
                                     Grade B: >= 56 dBuV/m
              --------------------------------------------
              Channels 14-69:   Indoor Grade: >= 94 dBuV/m
                                  City Grade: >= 80 dBuV/m
                                     Grade A: >= 74 dBuV/m
                                     Grade B: >= 64 dBuV/m

              Digital Television Broadcasting
              -------------------------------
              Channels 2-6:       City Grade: >= 35 dBuV/m
                           Service Threshold: >= 28 dBuV/m
              --------------------------------------------
              Channels 7-13:      City Grade: >= 43 dBuV/m
                           Service Threshold: >= 36 dBuV/m
              --------------------------------------------
              Channels 14-69:     City Grade: >= 48 dBuV/m
                           Service Threshold: >= 41 dBuV/m

              NOAA Weather Radio (162.400 - 162.550 MHz)
              ------------------------------------------
                         Reliable: >= 18 dBuV/m
                     Not reliable: <  18 dBuV/m
              Unlikely to receive: <  0 dBuV/m

              FM Radio Broadcasting (88.1 - 107.9 MHz)
              ----------------------------------------
              Analog Service Contour:  60 dBuV/m
              Digital Service Contour: 65 dBuV/m

RECEIVED POWER LEVEL ANALYSIS

       If  the  transmitter's  effective  radiated  power  (ERP) is specified in the transmitter's .lrp file, or
       expressed on the command-line using the -erp switch, and the -dbm switch is invoked, received power level
       contours referenced to decibels over one milliwatt (dBm) are produced:

       splat -t wnjt-dt -L 30.0 -erp 46000 -dbm -db -100 -o plot.ppm

       The  -db switch can be used to limit the extent to which received power level contours are plotted.  When
       plotting power level contours, the argument given is interpreted as being expressed in dBm.

       SPLAT! received power level color definition files share a very similar structure to the color definition
       files  described earlier, except that the power levels in dBm may be either positive or negative, and are
       limited to a range between +40 dBm and -200 dBm:

        ; SPLAT! Auto-generated DBM Signal Level Color Definition ("wnjt-dt.dcf") File
        ;
        ; Format for the parameters held in this file is as follows:
        ;
        ;    dBm: red, green, blue
        ;
        ; ...where "dBm" is the received signal power level between +40 dBm
        ; and -200 dBm, and "red", "green", and "blue" are the corresponding
        ; RGB color definitions ranging from 0 to 255 for the region specified.
        ;
        ; The following parameters may be edited and/or expanded
        ; for future runs of SPLAT!  A total of 32 contour regions
        ; may be defined in this file.
        ;
        ;
          +0: 255,   0,   0
         -10: 255, 128,   0
         -20: 255, 165,   0
         -30: 255, 206,   0
         -40: 255, 255,   0
         -50: 184, 255,   0
         -60:   0, 255,   0
         -70:   0, 208,   0
         -80:   0, 196, 196
         -90:   0, 148, 255
        -100:  80,  80, 255
        -110:   0,  38, 255
        -120: 142,  63, 255
        -130: 196,  54, 255
        -140: 255,   0, 255
        -150: 255, 194, 204

ANTENNA RADIATION PATTERN PARAMETERS

       Normalized field voltage patterns for  a  transmitting  antenna's  horizontal  and  vertical  planes  are
       imported  automatically  into  SPLAT!  when a path loss, field strength, or received power level coverage
       analysis is performed.  Antenna pattern data is read from a pair of files having the same  base  name  as
       the  transmitter  and LRP files, but with .az and .el extensions for azimuth and elevation pattern files,
       respectively.  Specifications regarding pattern rotation (if any)  and  mechanical  beam  tilt  and  tilt
       direction (if any) are also contained within SPLAT! antenna pattern files.

       For example, the first few lines of a SPLAT! azimuth pattern file might appear as follows (kvea.az):

               183.0
               0       0.8950590
               1       0.8966406
               2       0.8981447
               3       0.8995795
               4       0.9009535
               5       0.9022749
               6       0.9035517
               7       0.9047923
               8       0.9060051

       The  first line of the .az file specifies the amount of azimuthal pattern rotation (measured clockwise in
       degrees from True North) to be applied by SPLAT! to the data contained in the .az file.  This is followed
       by  azimuth  headings  (0 to 360 degrees) and their associated normalized field patterns (0.000 to 1.000)
       separated by whitespace.

       The structure of SPLAT! elevation pattern files is slightly different.  The first line of  the  .el  file
       specifies  the  amount  of mechanical beam tilt applied to the antenna.  Note that a downward tilt (below
       the horizon) is expressed as a positive angle, while an upward tilt (above the horizon) is expressed as a
       negative angle.  This data is followed by the azimuthal direction of the tilt, separated by whitespace.

       The  remainder  of  the  file  consists  of  elevation  angles and their corresponding normalized voltage
       radiation pattern (0.000 to 1.000) values separated by whitespace.  Elevation angles  must  be  specified
       over  a  -10.0 to +90.0 degree range.  As was the convention with mechanical beamtilt, negative elevation
       angles are used to represent elevations above the horizon, while positive  angles  represents  elevations
       below the horizon.

       For example, the first few lines a SPLAT! elevation pattern file might appear as follows (kvea.el):

               1.1    130.0
              -10.0   0.172
              -9.5    0.109
              -9.0    0.115
              -8.5    0.155
              -8.0    0.157
              -7.5    0.104
              -7.0    0.029
              -6.5    0.109
              -6.0    0.185

       In  this  example,  the  antenna  is mechanically tilted downward 1.1 degrees towards an azimuth of 130.0
       degrees.

       For best results, the resolution of azimuth pattern data  should  be  specified  to  the  nearest  degree
       azimuth,  and  elevation pattern data resolution should be specified to the nearest 0.01 degrees.  If the
       pattern data specified does not reach this level  of  resolution,  SPLAT!  will  interpolate  the  values
       provided  to  determine  the  data  at  the  required  resolution,  although this may result in a loss in
       accuracy.

EXPORTING AND IMPORTING REGIONAL CONTOUR DATA

       Performing a regional coverage analysis based on an ITM path  analysis  can  be  a  very  time  consuming
       process,  especially  if  the  analysis  is  performed  repeatedly  to discover what effects changes to a
       transmitter's antenna radiation pattern make to the predicted coverage area.

       This process can be expedited by exporting the contour data produced by SPLAT! to an alphanumeric  output
       (.ano)  file.   The  data  contained  in  this  file  can then be modified to incorporate antenna pattern
       effects, and imported back into SPLAT! to quickly produce a revised contour map.  Depending on the way in
       which  SPLAT!  is invoked, alphanumeric output files can describe regional path loss, signal strength, or
       received signal power levels.

       For example, an alphanumeric output file containing path loss information can be generated by SPLAT!  for
       a  receive  site  30  feet  above  ground level over a 50 mile radius surrounding a transmitter site to a
       maximum path loss of 140 dB (assuming ERP is not specified in the  transmitter's  .lrp  file)  using  the
       following syntax:

       splat -t kvea -L 30.0 -R 50.0 -db 140 -ano pathloss.dat

       If  ERP  is  specified  in the .lrp file or on the command line through the -erp switch, the alphanumeric
       output file will instead contain predicted field values in dBuV/m.  If the -dBm command  line  switch  is
       used, then the alphanumeric output file will contain receive signal power levels in dBm.

       SPLAT! alphanumeric output files can exceed many hundreds of megabytes in size.  They contain information
       relating to the boundaries of the region they describe followed by latitudes (degrees North),  longitudes
       (degrees  West),  azimuths (referenced to True North), elevations (to the first obstruction), followed by
       either path loss (in dB), received field strength (in dBuV/m), or received signal power  level  (in  dBm)
       without regard to the transmitting antenna's radiation pattern.

       The  first  few  lines  of  a  SPLAT!  alphanumeric  output  file  could take on the following appearance
       (pathloss.dat):

               119, 117    ; max_west, min_west
               35, 34      ; max_north, min_north
               34.2265424, 118.0631096, 48.199, -32.747, 67.70
               34.2270358, 118.0624421, 48.199, -19.161, 73.72
               34.2275292, 118.0617747, 48.199, -13.714, 77.24
               34.2280226, 118.0611072, 48.199, -10.508, 79.74
               34.2290094, 118.0597723, 48.199, -11.806, 83.26 *
               34.2295028, 118.0591048, 48.199, -11.806, 135.47 *
               34.2299962, 118.0584373, 48.199, -15.358, 137.06 *
               34.2304896, 118.0577698, 48.199, -15.358, 149.87 *
               34.2314763, 118.0564348, 48.199, -15.358, 154.16 *
               34.2319697, 118.0557673, 48.199, -11.806, 153.42 *
               34.2324631, 118.0550997, 48.199, -11.806, 137.63 *
               34.2329564, 118.0544322, 48.199, -11.806, 139.23 *
               34.2339432, 118.0530971, 48.199, -11.806, 139.75 *
               34.2344365, 118.0524295, 48.199, -11.806, 151.01 *
               34.2349299, 118.0517620, 48.199, -11.806, 147.71 *
               34.2354232, 118.0510944, 48.199, -15.358, 159.49 *
               34.2364099, 118.0497592, 48.199, -15.358, 151.67 *

       Comments can be placed in the file if they are preceeded by a semicolon.  The vim text editor has  proven
       capable of editing files of this size.

       Note  as was the case in the antenna pattern files, negative elevation angles refer to upward tilt (above
       the horizon), while positive angles refer to downward tilt (below the horizon).  These  angles  refer  to
       the  elevation to the receiving antenna at the height above ground level specified using the -L switch if
       the path between transmitter and receiver is unobstructed.  If  the  path  between  the  transmitter  and
       receiver  is  obstructed,  an  asterisk  (*)  is  placed  on the end of the line, and the elevation angle
       returned by SPLAT! refers the elevation angle  to  the  first  obstruction  rather  than  the  geographic
       location  specified  on  the line.  This is done in response to the fact that the ITM model considers the
       energy reaching a distant point over an obstructed path to be the result of the energy scattered over the
       top of the first obstruction along the path.  Since energy cannot reach the obstructed location directly,
       the actual elevation angle to the destination over such a path becomes irrelevant.

       When modifying SPLAT! path loss files to reflect antenna pattern  data,  only  the  last  numeric  column
       should  be amended to reflect the antenna's normalized gain at the azimuth and elevation angles specified
       in the file.  Programs and scripts capable of performing this task are left as an exercise for the user.

       Modified alphanumeric output files can be imported back into SPLAT!  for generating revised coverage maps
       provided  that  the  ERP  and  -dBm  options  are used as they were when the alphanumeric output file was
       originally generated:

       splat -t kvea -ani pathloss.dat -s city.dat -b county.dat -o map.ppm

       Note that alphanumeric output files generated by splat cannot be used with splat-hd, or vice-versa due to
       the resolution incompatibility between the two versions of the program.  Also, each of the three types of
       alphanumeric output files are incompatible with one another, so a file containing path loss  data  cannot
       be imported into SPLAT! to produce signal strength or received power level contours, etc.

USER-DEFINED TERRAIN INPUT FILES

       A  user-defined  terrain file is a user-generated text file containing latitudes, longitudes, and heights
       above ground level of specific terrain features believed to be of importance to the SPLAT! analysis being
       conducted,  but noticeably absent from the SDF files being used.  A user-defined terrain file is imported
       into a SPLAT! analysis using the -udt switch:

        splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -udt udt_file.txt -o map.ppm

       A user-defined terrain file has the following appearance and structure:

              40.32180556, 74.1325, 100.0 meters
              40.321805, 74.1315, 300.0
              40.3218055, 74.1305, 100.0 meters

       Terrain height is interpreted as being described in feet above ground level unless followed by  the  word
       meters,  and  is  added  on top of the terrain specified in the SDF data for the locations specified.  Be
       aware that each user-defined terrain feature specified will be interpreted as being 3-arc seconds in both
       latitude  and  longitude  in  splat  and  1  arc-second  in latitude and longitude in splat-hd.  Features
       described in the user-defined terrain file that overlap previously  defined  features  in  the  file  are
       ignored by SPLAT! to avoid ambiguity.

GROUND CLUTTER

       The height of ground clutter can be specified using the -gc switch:

             splat -t wnjt-dt -r kd2bd -gc 30.0 -H wnjt-dt_path.png

       The -gc switch as the effect of raising the overall terrain by the specified amount in feet (or meters if
       the -metric switch is invoked), except over areas at sea-level and  at  the  transmitting  and  receiving
       antenna locations.

SIMPLE TOPOGRAPHIC MAP GENERATION

       In  certain  situations  it  may  be desirable to generate a topographic map of a region without plotting
       coverage areas, line-of-sight paths, or generating obstruction reports.  There are several ways of  doing
       this.   If  one  wishes  to  generate  a  topographic  map illustrating the location of a transmitter and
       receiver site along with a brief text report describing the locations and distances  between  the  sites,
       the -n switch should be invoked as follows:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -n -o topo_map.ppm

       If no text report is desired, then the -N switch is used:

       splat -t tx_site -r rx_site -N -o topo_map.ppm

       If a topographic map centered about a single site out to a minimum specified radius is desired instead, a
       command similar to the following can be used:

       splat -t tx_site -R 50.0 -s NJ_Cities -b NJ_Counties -o topo_map.ppm

       where -R specifies the minimum radius of the map in miles (or kilometers if the -metric switch is  used).
       Note  that  the  tx_site  name  and  location  are  not  displayed  in  this example.  If display of this
       information is desired, simply create a SPLAT! city file (-s  option)  and  append  it  to  the  list  of
       command-line options illustrated above.

       If  the -o switch and output filename are omitted in these operations, topographic output is written to a
       file named tx_site.ppm in the current working directory by default.

GEOREFERENCE FILE GENERATION

       Topographic, coverage (-c), and path loss contour (-L) maps generated by  SPLAT!  may  be  imported  into
       Xastir  (X Amateur Station Tracking and Information Reporting) software by generating a georeference file
       using SPLAT!'s -geo switch:

       splat -t kd2bd -R 50.0 -s NJ_Cities -b NJ_Counties -geo -o map.ppm

       The georeference file generated will have the same base name as the -o file specified, but have  a   .geo
       extension, and permit proper interpretation and display of SPLAT!'s .ppm graphics in Xastir software.

GOOGLE MAP KML FILE GENERATION

       Keyhole  Markup  Language  files  compatible with Google Earth may be generated by SPLAT! when performing
       point-to-point or regional coverage analyses by invoking the -kml switch:

       splat -t wnjt-dt -r kd2bd -kml

       The KML file generated will have  the  same  filename  structure  as  a  Path  Analysis  Report  for  the
       transmitter and receiver site names given, except it will carry a  .kml extension.

       Once  loaded into Google Earth (File --> Open), the KML file will annotate the map display with the names
       of the transmitter and receiver site locations.  The viewpoint of the image will be from the position  of
       the  transmitter  site looking towards the location of the receiver.  The point-to-point path between the
       sites will be displayed as a white line while the RF line-of-sight  path  will  be  displayed  in  green.
       Google  Earth's  navigation tools allow the user to "fly" around the path, identify landmarks, roads, and
       other featured content.

       When performing regional coverage analysis, the  .kml file generated by SPLAT! will permit path  loss  or
       signal  strength contours to be layered on top of Google Earth's display along with a corresponding color
       key in the upper left-hand corner.  The generated .kml file will have the same basename as  that  of  the
       .ppm file normally generated.

DETERMINATION OF ANTENNA HEIGHT ABOVE AVERAGE TERRAIN

       SPLAT!  determines  antenna  height  above  average  terrain (HAAT) according to the procedure defined by
       Federal Communications Commission Part 73.313(d).  According to this definition, terrain elevations along
       eight  radials  between 2 and 10 miles (3 and 16 kilometers) from the site being analyzed are sampled and
       averaged for each 45 degrees of azimuth starting with True North.  If one or more  radials  lie  entirely
       over water or over land outside the United States (areas for which no USGS topography data is available),
       then those radials are omitted from the calculation of average terrain.

       Note that SRTM-3 elevation data, unlike older USGS data, extends beyond the borders of the United States.
       Therefore,  HAAT results may not be in full compliance with FCC Part 73.313(d) in areas along the borders
       of the United States if the SDF files used by SPLAT! are SRTM-derived.

       When performing point-to-point terrain analysis, SPLAT!  determines  the  antenna  height  above  average
       terrain  only  if enough topographic data has already been loaded by the program to perform the point-to-
       point analysis.  In most cases, this will be true, unless the site in question does  not  lie  within  10
       miles of the boundary of the topography data in memory.

       When  performing area prediction analysis, enough topography data is normally loaded by SPLAT! to perform
       average terrain calculations.  Under such conditions,  SPLAT!  will  provide  the  antenna  height  above
       average  terrain as well as the average terrain above mean sea level for azimuths of 0, 45, 90, 135, 180,
       225, 270, and 315 degrees, and include such information in the generated site report.  If one or more  of
       the  eight  radials  surveyed fall over water, or over regions for which no SDF data is available, SPLAT!
       reports No Terrain for the radial paths affected.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

       The latest news and information regarding SPLAT!  software  is  available  through  the  official  SPLAT!
       software web page located at: http://www.qsl.net/kd2bd/splat.html.

AUTHORS

       John A. Magliacane, KD2BD <kd2bd@amsat.org>
              Creator, Lead Developer

       Doug McDonald <mcdonald@scs.uiuc.edu>
              Original Longley-Rice ITM Model integration

       Ron Bentley <ronbentley@embarqmail.com>
              Fresnel Zone plotting and clearance determination