lecture 11: geometry of the ellipse 25 february 2008 gisc-3325

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Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse 25 February 2008 GISC-3325

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Page 1: Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse 25 February 2008 GISC-3325

Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse

25 February 2008

GISC-3325

Page 2: Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse 25 February 2008 GISC-3325

Class Update

• Next exam 12 March 2008

• Labs 1-4 due today!

• Homework 2 due 3 March 2008

• Will have exams graded by next Monday– Will post solutions to class web page

Page 3: Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse 25 February 2008 GISC-3325

Note on orthometric heights

• Orthometric height differences are provided by leveling ONLY when there is parallelism between equipotential surfaces.– Over short distances this may be the case.

• To account for non-parallelism we use geopotential numbers in computations.

• In general, geopotential surfaces are NOT parallel in a N-S direction but are E-W

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Level Project

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Gravity values for points

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Helmert Orthometric Heights

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Geometry of the Ellipsoid

• Ellipsoid of revolution is formed by rotating a meridian ellipse about its minor axis thereby forming a 3-D solid, the ellipsoid.

• Modern models are chosen on the basis of their fit to the geoid.– Not always the case!

Page 10: Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse 25 February 2008 GISC-3325

Parameters

• a = semi-major axis length

• b = semi-minor axis length

• f = flattening = (a-b)/a

• e = first eccentricity = √((a2-b2)/a2)

• e’ = second eccentricity = √((a2-b2)/b2)

Page 11: Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse 25 February 2008 GISC-3325

THE ELLIPSOIDMATHEMATICAL MODEL OF THE EARTH

b

a

a = Semi major axis b = Semi minor axis f = a-b = Flattening a

N

S

Page 12: Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse 25 February 2008 GISC-3325

THE GEOID AND TWO ELLIPSOIDS

GRS80-WGS84CLARKE 1866

GEOID

Earth Mass Center

Approximately 236 meters

Page 13: Lecture 11: Geometry of the Ellipse 25 February 2008 GISC-3325

NAD 83 and ITRF / WGS 84

ITRF / WGS 84NAD 83

Earth Mass Center

2.2 m (3-D) dX,dY,dZ

GEOID

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Geodetic latitude

Geocentric latitude

Parametric latitude

Unlike the sphere, the ellipsoid does not possess a constant radius of curvature.

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Radius of Curvature of the Prime Vertical

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