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Equirectangular projection - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Equirectangular projection

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An equirectangular projection of the Earth; the standard parallel is the equator.
An equirectangular projection of the Earth; the standard parallel is the equator.

The equirectangular projection (also called the equidistant cylindrical projection, geographic projection, plate carré or carte parallelogrammatique projection or CPP) is a very simple map projection attributed to Marinus of Tyre, who Ptolemy claims invented the projection about 100 AD.[1] The projection maps meridians to equally spaced vertical straight lines, and parallels to equally spaced horizontal straight lines.

Contents

[edit] Definition

x = \lambda \cos(\phi_1)\,
y = \phi\,

where

\lambda\, is the longitude from the central meridian of the projection,
\phi\, is the latitude
\phi_1\, are the standard parallels (north and south of the equator) where the scale of the projection is true.

Note that on the right side of the equation, the coordinates \lambda\, and \phi\, are linear, not angular, measurements. The point (0,0) is at the center of the resulting projection (in particular, this requires the input range to be [ − π,π] rather than [0,2π]). This projection maps longitude and latitude directly into x and y, hence is sometimes called the longitude-latitude projection.

The plate carrée (French, for "flat square"), is the special case where \phi_1\, is zero.

[edit] Uses

The projection is neither equal area nor conformal. Because of the distortions introduced by this projection, it has little use in navigation or cadastral mapping and finds its main use in thematic mapping. In particular, the plate carrée has become a de-facto standard for computer applications that process global maps, such as Celestia and NASA World Wind, because of the trivial connection between an image pixel and its geographic position.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Flattening the Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections, John P. Snyder, 1993, pp. 5-8, ISBN 0-226-76747-7.

[edit] External links


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