[Proj] Re: Distance measured in Mercator projection

Ed McNierney ed at mcnierney.com
Wed Jul 9 14:40:19 PDT 2008


Daan -

I think I am beginning to have more frequent "senior moments".  I do not know what caused me to overlook that important point, and thanks VERY much for the prompt correction!  Perhaps I've just been avoiding Mercator for too long <g>.

    - Ed

Ed McNierney
205 Indian Hill Road
Groton, MA  01450
ed at mcnierney.com
+1 (978) 761-0049



On 7/9/08 5:26 PM, "strebe at aol.com" <strebe at aol.com> wrote:


 Not so. The Mercator is conformal. The scale factor is the same in all directions at any particular point. For any cylindric projection other than Mercator, you use the same formula with the caveat noted by Mr. McNierney. But on Mercator the scale factor applies in all directions.

Regards,
-- daan Strebe


-----Original Message-----
From: Ed McNierney <ed at mcnierney.com>
To: PROJ.4 and general Projections Discussions <proj at lists.maptools.org>
Sent: Wed, 9 Jul 2008 1:45 pm
Subject: Re: [Proj] Re: Distance measured in Mercator projection

Shannon -

Your question implies you are only interested in measuring east/west distances, and Daan's answer is helpful for that purpose.  But that answer ONLY applies to measuring a line that runs due east/west.  A line running north/south, of the same length on the Earth as the east/west one, would be a different length on a Mercator projection.  If you wish to measure an arbitrary line on a Mercator projection you need to also take into account the angle of that line to the Equator (as well as the latitude, and whether you're assuming a spherical Earth).

This is one of the many reasons Mercator projections are most useful to 17th-century mariners.
    - Ed

Ed McNierney
205 Indian Hill Road
Groton, MA  01450
ed at mcnierney.com
+1 (978) 761-0049



On 7/9/08 4:21 PM, "strebe at aol.com" <strebe at aol.com> wrote:


If you assume a spherical earth, the length of a meter on the Mercator equatorial aspect is

1m / cos (phi)

where phi is the latitude and "cos" is the cosine function. Be careful to set the calculator to degrees or else to convert the latitude to radians. The calculation is more complicated on an ellipsoidal earth.

Regards,
-- daan Strebe


-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Scott <sscott at locationinc.com>
To: Proj at lists.maptools.org
Sent: Wed, 9 Jul 2008 10:52 am
Subject: [Proj] Distance measured in Mercator projection

Hello,
Please forgive my ignorance, I know very  little about map projections.  I apologize if this list is not the appropriate place to post this question.
If I understand correctly, in the Mercator projection, 1 unit of space is equal to 1 meter at the equator.
As you move away from the equator, the longitudinal lines are stretched to make the lat and long intersect at 90 degree angles.
How would I calculate the length in meters of 1 unit of space in the Mercator projection at a specific latitude?
Any advice of pointers are appreciated.
Thank you.
Shannon

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