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From: Knut-Frode D. <knu...@ho...> - 2015-02-23 18:11:20
|
Hi, I have a question related to use of pyproj. I am trying to calculate the azimuth orientation of vectors in a general coordinate system, defined by a proj4 string. My approach is to calculate the azimuth angle of the y-axis of the given projection, and add this to the angle relative to the given coordinate system. The illustration code below uses pyproj.Geod to calculate azimuth angle along the projection y-axis, but the output (bottom) does not make sense; the azimuth angle is found to be nearly the same for points at very different latitudes. This is the same for other projections such as e.g.: proj4 = '+proj=lcc +lon_0=15 +lat_0=63 +lat_1=63 +lat_2=63 +R=6.371e+06 +units=m +no_defs' However, using simply proj4 = '+proj=stere', I get results as expected. But as soon as I add '+lat_0' to the proj4-string, output is clearly wrong. Does anyone have a clue what is going on here? Best regards from Knut-Frode -------------------------------------- import numpy as np from mpl_toolkits.basemap import pyproj proj4 = '+proj=stere +lat_0=90 +lon_0=70 +lat_ts=60 +units=m +a=6.371e+06 +e=0 +no_defs' p = pyproj.Proj(proj4) # Create three points for testing lon_1 = np.array([30., 30., 30.]) lat_1 = np.array([60., 80., 89.]) x_1, y_1 = p(lon_1, lat_1) # Calculate projection (x,y) coordinates lon_2, lat_2 = p(x_1, y_1 + 1000.0, inverse=True, errchk=True) # Find (lon,lat) of a point 1000 m away along y-axis # Calculate azimuth from p1 to p2 (i.e. along projection y-axis) g = pyproj.Geod(ellps='WGS84') az = g.inv(lon_1, lat_1, lon_2, lat_2, radians=False) # Output: [-40.04826805 -40.00599836 -40.00008458] - does not make sense print az[0] |