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Geographic Information Systems

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Title: Geographic Information Systems


1
Geographic Information Systems
  • SGO 1910, SGO 4030
  • October 18, 2005

2
Quizzes
  • Class average 24,8
  • Two problem questions I concede!

3
  • 19. Efforts to promote an international standard
    for ellipsoids has led to the wide acceptance of
    the North American Datum of 1927 (NAD27) (False,
    WGS84 or NAD83) but many older data still
    adhere to earlier standards, such as NAD 27 (p.
    116)
  • 24. The modern history of GIS dates from the
    early 1950s, when computers were developed.
    (False the modern history of GIS dates from
    the early 1950s, when the price of sufficiently
    powerful computers fell below a critical
    threshold p. 18)

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5
  • 20. Geographic techniques can be applied to
    non-geographic spaces. True
  • But many of the methods used in GIS are also
    applicable to other non-geographic spaces,
    including the surfaces of other planets, the
    space of the cosmos, and the space of the human
    body that is captured by medical images (p. 8)

6
  • 27. If you were going hiking in the forest, it
    would be most useful to take along a map with a
    small representative fraction. FALSE
  • 150000 gt 11000000
  • 30. Digital representations of geographic
    phenomena are formalized through photographic
    models. FALSE

7
Revised Schedule
  • Week 42 (October 18) GIS Data Collection Chapter
    9
  • GPS
  • Week 43 (October 25) Geographic
    Databases Chapters 10
  • Week 44 (Nov. 1) Geographic Analysis Chapters 14,
    15
  • Week 45 (Nov. 8) Mid-term Quiz II
  • Map Production Chapter 12
  • Week 46 (Nov. 15) GIS and Society Chapter 18
  • Week 47 (November 22) NO CLASS
  • Week 48 Final Exam Dec 1

8
Uncertainty
9
The more scientific knowledge we gain, the more
uncertain we are likely to be Richness of
representation and computational power only make
us more aware of the range and variety of
established uncertainties, and challenge us to
integrate new ones (Longley et al. 2005, p.
152).
10
Data AcquisitionGetting the Map into the
Computer
11
Data capture
  • Primary (direct measurement, e.g. remote sensing
    and surveying)
  • Secondary (derivation from other sources
    digitizing, scanning, etc.)

12
Data transfer
  • Input of data from other systems (via Internet,
    CD ROMs, tapes, etc.)

13
GIS maps are digital
  • Real maps traditional paper maps that can be
    touched
  • Virtual maps an arrangement of information
    inside the computer the GIS can be used to
    generate the map however and whenever necessary.

14
GIS Data Conversion
  • Traditionally the most time-consuming and
    expensive part of a GIS project
  • Involves a one-time cost
  • Digital maps can be reused and shared.
  • Requires maintenance (eg. updating)

15
GIS data can be
  • Purchased.
  • Found from existing sources in digital form.
  • Captured from analog maps by GEOCODING.

16
Finding Existing Map Data
  • Map libraries
  • Reference books
  • State and local agencies
  • Federal agencies
  • Commercial data suppliers

17
Existing Map Data
  • Existing map data can be found through a map
    library, via network searches, or on media such
    as CD-ROM and disk.
  • Many major data providers make their data
    available via the Internet.

18
Statenskartverkhttp//ngis.statkart.no/katalog/ja
va/katalog.asp
  • Rasterdata
  • Temakart
  • Vektordata
  • Primærdata
  • Prosjekter

19
1. Accessing GIS Data
  • Example Costa Rica

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26
Data Collection
  • One of most expensive GIS activities
  • Many diverse sources
  • Two broad types of collection
  • Data capture (direct collection)
  • Data transfer
  • Two broad capture methods
  • Primary (direct measurement)
  • Secondary (indirect derivation)

27
Data Collection Techniques
28
GEOCODING
  • Geocoding is the conversion of spatial
    information into digital form.
  • Geocoding involves capturing the map, and
    sometimes also capturing the attributes.

29
Primary Data Capture
  • Capture specifically for GIS use
  • Raster remote sensing
  • e.g. SPOT and IKONOS satellites and aerial
    photography
  • Passive and active sensors
  • Resolution is key consideration
  • Spatial
  • Spectral
  • Temporal

30
Secondary Geographic Data Capture
  • Data collected for other purposes can be
    converted for use in GIS
  • Raster conversion
  • Scanning of maps, aerial photographs, documents,
    etc
  • Important scanning parameters are spatial and
    spectral (bit depth) resolution

31
Vector Primary Data Capture
  • Surveying
  • Locations of objects determines by angle and
    distance measurements from known locations
  • Uses expensive field equipment and crews
  • Most accurate method for large scale, small areas
  • GPS
  • Collection of satellites used to fix locations on
    Earths surface
  • Differential GPS used to improve accuracy

32
Vector Secondary Data Capture
  • Collection of vector objects from maps,
    photographs, plans, etc.
  • Digitizing
  • Manual (table)
  • Heads-up and vectorization
  • Photogrammetry the science and technology of
    making measurements from photographs, etc.
  • COGO Coordinate Geometry

33
Managing Data Capture Projects
  • Key principles
  • Clear plan, adequate resources, appropriate
    funding, and sufficient time
  • Fundamental tradeoff between
  • Quality, speed and price
  • Two strategies
  • Incremental
  • Blitzkrieg (all at once)
  • Alternative resource options
  • In house
  • Specialist external agency

34
Summary
  • Data collection is very expensive,
    time-consuming, tedious and error prone
  • Good procedures required for large scale
    collection projects
  • Main techniques
  • Primary
  • Raster e.g. remote sensing
  • Vector e.g. field survey
  • Secondary
  • Raster e.g. scanning
  • Vector e.g. table digitizing

35
Digitizing
  • Captures map data by tracing lines from a map by
    hand
  • Uses a cursor and an electronically-sensitive
    tablet
  • Result is a string of points with (x, y) values

36
Digitizer
37
The Digitizing Tablet
38
Digitizing
  • Stable base map
  • Fix to tablet
  • Digitize control
  • Determine coordinate transformation
  • Trace features
  • Proof plot
  • Edit
  • Clean and build

39
Selecting points to digitize
40
Scanner
41
Scanning
  • Places a map on a glass plate, and passes a light
    beam over it
  • Measures the reflected light intensity
  • Result is a grid of pixels
  • Image size and resolution are important
  • Features can drop out

42
Scanning example
This section of map was scanned, resulting in a
file in TIF format that was bytes in size. This
was a file of color intensities between 0 and
255 for red, green, and blue in each of three
layers spaced on a grid 0.25 millimeter apart.
How much data would be necessary to capture the
features on your map as vectors? Would it be
more or less than the grid (raster) file?
43
Field data collection
44
Pen Portable PC and GPS
45
Data Transfer
  • Buy vs build is an important question
  • Many widely distributed sources of GI
  • Key catalogs include
  • US NSDI Clearinghouse network
  • Geography Network
  • Access technologies
  • Translation
  • Direct read

46
Attribute data
  • Logically can be thought of as in a flat file
  • Table with rows and columns
  • Attributes by records
  • Entries called values.

47
Database Management Systems
  • Data definition module sets constraints on the
    attribute values
  • Data entry module to enter and correct values
  • Data management system for storage and retrieval
  • Data definitions can be listed as a data
    dictionary
  • Database manager checks values with this
    dictionary, enforcing data validation.

48
The Role of Error
  • Map and attribute data errors are the data
    producer's responsibility, but the GIS user must
    understand error.
  • Accuracy and precision of map and attribute data
    in a GIS affect all other operations, especially
    when maps are compared across scales.

49
Part II Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
  • Sources of information
  • http//www.trimble.com/gps/
  • http//www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/gps
    /gps.htmlDODSystem

50
GPS is a Satellite Navigation System
  • GPS is funded by and controlled by the U. S.
    Department of Defense (DOD). While there are many
    thousands of civil users of GPS world-wide, the
    system was designed for and is operated by the U.
    S. military.
  • GPS provides specially coded satellite signals
    that can be processed in a GPS receiver, enabling
    the receiver to compute position, velocity and
    time.
  • Four GPS satellite signals are used to compute
    positions in three dimensions and the time offset
    in the receiver clock.

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Space Segment
  • The Space Segment of the system consists of the
    GPS satellites. These space vehicles (SVs) send
    radio signals from space.

53
Space Segment (cont)
  • The nominal GPS Operational Constellation
    consists of 24 satellites that orbit the earth in
    12 hours.
  • The satellite orbits repeat almost the same
    ground track (as the earth turns beneath them)
    once each day. The orbit altitude is such that
    the satellites repeat the same track and
    configuration over any point approximately each
    24 hours (4 minutes earlier each day).
  • There are six orbital planes (with nominally four
    SVs in each), equally spaced (60 degrees apart),
    and inclined at about fifty-five degrees with
    respect to the equatorial plane.
  • This constellation provides the user with between
    five and eight SVs visible from any point on the
    earth.

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GPS Satellites Name NAVSTAR Manufacturer
Rockwell International Altitude 10,900 nautical
miles Weight 1900 lbs (in orbit) Size17 ft
with solar panels extended Orbital Period 12
hours Orbital Plane 55 degrees to equitorial
plane Planned Lifespan 7.5 years Current
constellation 24 Block II production satellites
Future satellites 21 Block IIrs developed by
Martin Marietta
57
Latest Development
  • Galileo, Europe's contribution to the Global
    Navigation Satellite System (GNSS), is creating a
    buzz in the Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
    applications market. With its advantages of
    signal reliability and integrity, it is poised to
    drive European GPS applications markets. Unlike
    its US counterpart, Galileo is envisioned as
    being independent of military control and is
    expected to be harnessed for widespread
    commercial and civilian purposes. (Space Daily,
    Dec. 18, 2003)

58
Control Segment
  • The Control Segment consists of a system of
    tracking stations located around the world.

59
The Master Control facility is located at
Schriever Air Force Base (formerly Falcon AFB) in
Colorado. These monitor stations measure signals
from the SVs which are incorporated into orbital
models for each satellites. The models compute
precise orbital data (ephemeris) and SV clock
corrections for each satellite. The Master
Control station uploads ephemeris and clock data
to the SVs. The SVs then send subsets of the
orbital ephemeris data to GPS receivers over
radio signals.
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User Segment
  • The GPS User Segment consists of the GPS
    receivers and the user community. GPS receivers
    convert SV signals into position, velocity, and
    time estimates. Four satellites are required to
    compute the four dimensions of X, Y, Z (position)
    and Time. GPS receivers are used for navigation,
    positioning, time dissemination, and other
    research.
  • Navigation in three dimensions is the primary
    function of GPS. Navigation receivers are made
    for aircraft, ships, ground vehicles, and for
    hand carrying by individuals.

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  • Precise positioning is possible using GPS
    receivers at reference locations providing
    corrections and relative positioning data for
    remote receivers. Surveying, geodetic control,
    and plate tectonic studies are examples.

65
Here's how GPS works in five logical steps
  • The basis of GPS is "triangulation" from
    satellites.
  • To "triangulate," a GPS receiver measures
    distance using the travel time of radio signals.
  • To measure travel time, GPS needs very accurate
    timing which it achieves with some tricks.
  • Along with distance, you need to know exactly
    where the satellites are in space. High orbits
    and careful monitoring are the secret.
  • Finally you must correct for any delays the
    signal experiences as it travels through the
    atmosphere.

66
Triangulating
  • Position is calculated from distance measurements
    (ranges) to satellites. 
  • Mathematically we need four satellite ranges to
    determine exact position. 
  • Three ranges are enough if we reject ridiculous
    answers or use other tricks. 
  • Another range is required for technical reasons
    to be discussed later.

67
Measuring Distance
  • Distance to a satellite is determined by
    measuring how long a radio signal takes to reach
    us from that satellite. 
  • To make the measurement we assume that both the
    satellite and our receiver are generating the
    same pseudo-random codes at exactly the same
    time. 
  • By comparing how late the satellite's
    pseudo-random code appears compared to our
    receiver's code, we determine how long it took to
    reach us. 
  • Multiply that travel time by the speed of light
    and you've got distance.

68
Getting Perfect Timing
  • Accurate timing is the key to measuring distance
    to satellites. 
  • Satellites are accurate because they have atomic
    clocks on board. 
  • Receiver clocks don't have to be too accurate
    because an extra satellite range measurement can
    remove errors.

69
2005 Nobel Prize in Physics
  • Two physicists (Hall and Haensch) shared the
    Nobel Prize in Physics for advancing the
    developmetn of laser-based precision
    spectroscopy, a field htat opens the way to the
    next generation of global positioning system
    (GPS) navigation and ultra-precise atomic clocks.

70
Satellite Positions
  • To use the satellites as references for range
    measurements we need to know exactly where they
    are. 
  • GPS satellites are so high up their orbits are
    very predictable. 
  • Minor variations in their orbits are measured by
    the U.S. Department of Defense. 
  • The error information is sent to the satellites,
    to be transmitted along with the timing signals.

71
  • Three satellites could be used determine three
    position dimensions with a perfect receiver
    clock. In practice this is rarely possible and
    three SVs are used to compute a two-dimensional,
    horizontal fix (in latitude and longitude) given
    an assumed height. This is often possible at sea
    or in altimeter equipped aircraft.
  • Five or more satellites can provide position,
    time and redundancy. More SVs can provide extra
    position fix certainty and can allow detection of
    out-of-tolerance signals under certain
    circumstances.

72
  • Position in XYZ is converted within the receiver
    to geodetic latitude, longitude and height above
    the ellipsoid.
  • Latitude and longitude are usually provided in
    the geodetic datum on which GPS is based
    (WGS-84). Receivers can often be set to convert
    to other user-required datums. Position offsets
    of hundreds of meters can result from using the
    wrong datum.

73
GPS errors are a combination of noise, bias,
blunders.
74
Selective Availability (SA)
  • SA is the intentional degradation of the SPS
    signals by a time varying bias. SA is controlled
    by the DOD to limit accuracy for non-U. S.
    military and government users.
  • SA was turned off in May, 2000!

75
Bias Error sources
  • SV clock errors uncorrected by Control Segment
    1 meter
  • Ephemeris data errors 1 meter
  • Tropospheric delays 1 meter. The troposphere is
    the lower part (ground level to from 8 to 13 km)
    of the atmosphere that experiences the changes in
    temperature, pressure, and humidity associated
    with weather changes. Complex models of
    tropospheric delay require estimates or
    measurements of these parameters.
  • Unmodeled ionosphere delays 10 meters. The
    ionosphere is the layer of the atmosphere from 50
    to 500 km that consists of ionized air. The
    transmitted model can only remove about half of
    the possible 70 ns of delay leaving a ten meter
    un-modeled residual.
  • Multipath 0.5 meters. Multipath is caused by
    reflected signals from surfaces near the receiver
    that can either interfere with or be mistaken for
    the signal that follows the straight line path
    from the satellite. Multipath is difficult to
    detect and sometime hard to avoid.

76
Blunders can result in errors of hundred of
kilometers.
  • Control segment mistakes due to computer or human
    error can cause errors from one meter to hundreds
    of kilometers.
  • User mistakes, including incorrect geodetic datum
    selection, can cause errors from 1 to hundreds of
    meters.
  • Receiver errors from software or hardware
    failures can cause blunder errors of any size.

77
Correcting Errors
  • The earth's ionosphere and atmosphere cause
    delays in the GPS signal that translate into
    position errors.
  •  
  • Some errors can be factored out using mathematics
    and modeling. 
  • The configuration of the satellites in the sky
    can magnify other errors. 
  • Differential GPS can eliminate almost all error.

78
  • GPS technology has matured into a resource that
    goes far beyond its original design goals. These
    days scientists, sportsmen, farmers, soldiers,
    pilots, surveyors, hikers, delivery drivers,
    sailors, dispatchers, lumberjacks, fire-fighters,
    and people from many other walks of life are
    using GPS in ways that make their work more
    productive, safer, and sometimes even easier.

79
Location Where am I?
  • The first and most obvious application of GPS is
    the simple determination of a "position" or
    location. GPS is the first positioning system to
    offer highly precise location data for any point
    on the planet, in any weather. That alone would
    be enough to qualify it as a major utility, but
    the accuracy of GPS and the creativity of its
    users is pushing it into some surprising realms.

80
Navigation Where am I going?
  • GPS helps you determine exactly where you are,
    but sometimes important to know how to get
    somewhere else. GPS was originally designed to
    provide navigation information for ships and
    planes. So it's no surprise that while this
    technology is appropriate for navigating on
    water, it's also very useful in the air and on
    the land.
  • The sea, one of our oldest channels of
    transportation, has been revolutionized by GPS,
    the newest navigation technology.

81
  • By providing more precise navigation tools and
    accurate landing systems, GPS not only makes
    flying safer, but also more efficient. With
    precise point-to-point navigation, GPS saves fuel
    and extends an aircraft's range by ensuring
    pilots don't stray from the most direct routes to
    their destinations.
  • GPS accuracy will also allow closer aircraft
    separations on more direct routes, which in turn
    means more planes can occupy our limited
    airspace. This is especially helpful when you're
    landing a plane in the middle of mountains. And
    small medical evac helicopters benefit from the
    extra minutes saved by the accuracy of GPS
    navigation.

82
  • Finding your way across the land is an ancient
    art and science. The stars, the compass, and good
    memory for landmarks helped you get from here to
    there. Even advice from someone along the way
    came into play. But, landmarks change, stars
    shift position, and compasses are affected by
    magnets and weather. And if you've ever sought
    directions from a local, you know it can just add
    to the confusion. The situation has never been
    perfect.
  • Today hikers, bikers, skiers, and drivers apply
    GPS to the age-old challenge of finding their
    way.

83
  • In 1994 Norwegian Borge Ousland reached the
    North Pole after skiing 1000 kilometers from
    Siberia alone and unsupported. For this
    incredible challenge Børge carried a bible to
    read, some Jimi Hendrix to listen to, and a
    Trimble Scout GPS receiver to help find his way.

84
Tracking
  • Commerce relies on fleets of vehicles to deliver
    goods and services either across a crowded city
    or through nationwide corridors. So, effective
    fleet management has direct bottom-line
    implications, such as telling a customer when a
    package will arrive, spacing buses for the best
    scheduled service, directing the nearest
    ambulance to an accident, or helping tankers
    avoid hazards.
  • GPS used in conjunction with communication links
    and computers can benefit applications in
    agriculture, mass transit, urban delivery, public
    safety, and vessel and vehicle tracking. So it's
    no surprise that police, ambulance, and fire
    departments are adopting GPS-based AVL (Automatic
    Vehicle Location) Manager to pinpoint both the
    location of the emergency and the location of the
    nearest response vehicle on a computer map. With
    this kind of clear visual picture of the
    situation, dispatchers can react immediately and
    confidently.

85
Timing
  • Although GPS is well-known for locating,
    navigation, and tracking, it's also used to
    disseminate precise time, time intervals, and
    frequency. Time is a powerful commodity, and
    exact time is more powerful still. Knowing that a
    group of timed events is perfectly synchronized
    is often very important. GPS makes the job of
    "synchronizing our watches" easy and reliable.
  • There are three fundamental ways we use time. As
    a universal marker, time tells us when things
    happened or when they will. As a way to
    synchronize people, events, even other types of
    signals, time helps keep the world on schedule.
    And as a way to tell how long things last, time
    provides and accurate, unambiguous sense of
    duration.
  • GPS satellites carry highly accurate atomic
    clocks. And in order for the system to work, our
    GPS receivers here on the ground synchronize
    themselves to these clocks. That means that every
    GPS receiver is, in essence, an atomic accuracy
    clock.

86
Mapping
  • Using GPS to survey and map it precisely saves
    time and money in this most stringent of all
    applications. Today, Trimble GPS makes it
    possible for a single surveyor to accomplish in a
    day what used to take weeks with an entire team.
    And they can do their work with a higher level of
    accuracy than ever before.
  • GPS technology is now the method of choice for
    performing control surveys, and the effect on
    surveying in general has been considerable. GPS
    pinpoints a position, a route, and a fleet of
    vehicles. Mapping is the art and science of using
    GPS to locate items, then create maps and models
    of everything in the world. Mountains, rivers,
    forests and other landforms. Roads, routes, and
    city streets. Endangered animals, precious
    minerals and all sorts of resources. Damage and
    disasters, trash and archeological treasures. GPS
    is mapping the world.
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