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Fundamental Parameters of The Ellipsoid, The Meridian Ellipse, and Coordinate Conversion

1) The document discusses the fundamental parameters that define the ellipsoid, including flattening, eccentricities, and angular eccentricity. 2) It describes the different latitudes used to define positions on the ellipsoid, including geodetic, geocentric, and reduced latitudes, and the relationships between them. 3) Formulas are provided to convert between the different latitudes and to compute the small differences between them.

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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
922 views7 pages

Fundamental Parameters of The Ellipsoid, The Meridian Ellipse, and Coordinate Conversion

1) The document discusses the fundamental parameters that define the ellipsoid, including flattening, eccentricities, and angular eccentricity. 2) It describes the different latitudes used to define positions on the ellipsoid, including geodetic, geocentric, and reduced latitudes, and the relationships between them. 3) Formulas are provided to convert between the different latitudes and to compute the small differences between them.

Uploaded by

Kismet
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy

The Reference Ellipsoid and the Computation of the Geodetic Position:


Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

Fundamental
Fundamental Parameters
Parameters ofof the
the
Ellipsoid,
Ellipsoid, the
the Meridian
Meridian Ellipse,
Ellipse, and
and
Coordinate
Coordinate Conversion
Conversion

Lecture No. 7

Department of Geodetic Engineering


University of the Philippines

a.s. caparas/06

The Ellipse and its Fundamental Parameters

The fundamental
parameters of the ellipse
Formulas:
are:
a−b
1. Flattening or Polar f =
a
Flattening, f
a 2 -b 2 a 2 − b2
e= ; e2 =
2. First Eccentricity, e a a2
a 2 -b 2 a 2 − b2
3. Second Eccentricity, e’ e' =
b
; (e')2 =
b2
4. Angular Eccentricity, α cos α = 1 − f ; sin α = e ; tan α = e'

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

1
Latitudes on the Meridian Ellipse
There are three different
latitudes used to define the
position of the point on a
meridian ellipse: z
1.Geodetic Latitude (φ)- angle
between the line normal to the
point and the equatorial plane.
2.Geocentric Latitude (ψ)- angle P’
between the line connecting the p
center of the ellipse to the point P
and the equatorial plane. a r
b
3.Reduced Latitude(β)- obtained z
by projecting the ellipse on the β ψ φ
geocentric circle having a radius p
a
equal to the semi-major axis, a

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

Parametric Representation of the


Meridian Ellipse
1.Using the geodetic latitude (φ):
a 2 cos ϕ b 2 sin ϕ
p= ,z=
a 2 cos 2 ϕ + b 2 sin 2 ϕ a 2 cos 2 ϕ + b 2 sin 2 ϕ

a cos ϕ a(1 − e 2 ) sin ϕ


p= ,z=
1 − e sin ϕ
2 2
1 − e 2 sin 2 ϕ

2.Using the geocentric latitude (ψ):


a(1 − e 2 )1 / 2 cos ψ a(1 − e 2 )1 / 2 sin ψ
p= ,z=
1 − e cos ψ
2 2
1 − e 2 cos 2 ψ

3.Using the reduced latitude (β):


p = a cos β , z = b sin β

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

2
Relationship Between the Various
Latitude
Comparing the parametric representations of
the meridian ellipse using the different latitudes,
we can find transformation between φ, β, and ψ:
• Geocentric to Geodetic:
2
b
tan ψ =   tan ϕ
a
• Reduced to Geodetic:
b
tan β = tan ϕ
a

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

Differences Between the Various


Latitudes
We can find a series expansion that will give the
difference in the values of the different latitudes:
• Geodetic and Geocentric:
e2
ϕ − ψ = sin 2ϕ + ....
2
• Geodetic and Reduced:
( ϕ -ψ )
ϕ−β =
2
• The maximum difference φ- β is 5’50” and the maximum
difference φ-ψ is 11’40” in the case of Clarke Spheroid of
1866.

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

3
Example Problem
Problem: therefore:
A point on the ellipsoid has a a
2

geocentric latitude of 45°N if the ϕ = tan −1   tan ψ


flattening f of the ellipsoid is b
1/294.9786982. Compute the values ϕ = tan −1  
2
1  o
of the geodetic and reduced latitude.   tan 45 
 1 − 1/ 294.9786982  

Solution: ϕ = 45o11' 40.44"


Given: ψ= 45°N, f-1/294.9786982
Find: φ and β Using the relationship between φ and β :
Using the relationship between φ and b
ψ: tan β =   tan ϕ
2
b a
tan ψ =   tan ϕ therefore:
a

a−b β = tan −1  (1 − 1/ 294.9786982) tan 45o11' 40.44"


And knowing f = we have:
2 a
b
 a  = (1 − f)
2
β = 45o 05 '50.22"
 
The Reference Ellipsoid and the
Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

Geodetic Coordinates and the Space Rectangular


Coordinates

• We can determine the


space rectangular
(x,y,z) given the
geodetic coordinates
(φ, λ, h) and it is given
by:

x=(p+hcos φ)cos λ
y =(p+hcos φ)sin λ
z=(z+hsin φ)

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

4
Example Problem
Problem: Using the equations for converting
A point on the ellipsoid has a geodetic to cartesian:
geodetic coordinates φ=45°N, λ x=(p+hcos φ)cos λ
=121°E, and h=1500 m. If the y =(p+hcos φ)sin λ
flattening f of the ellipsoid is z=(z+hsin φ)
1/294.98 and the semi-major axis
a=6,378,206 m, compute the Solving for p and z:
space rectangular coordinates of a cos ϕ a(1 − e 2 ) sin ϕ
the points p= ,z=
1 − e 2 sin 2 ϕ 1 − e 2 sin 2 ϕ

Solution: Solving for e2 given a and f:


Given:
φ=45°N f=1/294.9786982 e2=0.00676865799760962
λ=121°E a=6,378,206.4 m Therefore:
h=1500 m p=
6378206.4 cos 45o
Find: (x, y, z) coordinates of the (1 − (0.00676865799760962) sin 2 45o )
point p = 4,517,724.209 m
The Reference Ellipsoid and the
Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

Example Problem
Solving for z: z=(4487145.279+1500sin 45)
z=4,488,205.939 m
6378206.4(1− 0.00676865799760962)sin 45o
z=
1− (0.00676865799760962)sin2 45o
The space rectangular
z = 4,487,145.279 m coordinates of the point are:

Substituting the values of p, z, φ,


λ and h, we get:
x=(4517724.209+1500cos 45)cos x= -2,327,346.260 m
121 y =3,873,354.629 m
x= -2,327,346.260 m z=4,488,205.939 m

y =(4517724.209+1500cos 45)sin
121
y =3,873,354.629 m

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

5
Geodetic Coordinates and the Space Rectangular
Coordinates
• We can get the geodeteic
coordinates (φ, λ, h) of a point
given its space rectangular
coordinates (x,y,z) using these
equations:
• However, most of the solution
in converting space
rectangular coordinates to
geodtic coordinates requires
iteration in the computation of
the geodetic latitude.
• There are several solutions
that can be used in this
conversion

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

Geodetic Coordinates and the Space Rectangular


Coordinates
One solution is the following Then compute
iterative scheme: a
1.Calculate N=
(1 − e sin 2 ϕ )1/ 2
2
y
λ = tan−1 x2 + y 2
x h= −N
2.Iterate for φ; consequently cos ϕ
for h. the initial value for φ is giving
the spherical latitude,

   z  N  
−1

ϕo = tan−1 
z
 ϕ = tan  −1
1− e
2
 
 x2 + y 2   x2 + y2  N + h  
 

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

6
Geodetic Coordinates and the Space Rectangular
Coordinates
Another solution: 3.Then compute for h:
1.Calculate

y x2 + y 2
λ = tan−1 h= −N
x cos ϕ
2.Iterate for φ using as an
initial value for φ: where:

z  e2 N sin ϕ  a
ϕ = tan−1 1+  N=
x2 + y 2  z  (1 − e sin 2 ϕ )1/ 2
2

 z 
ϕinitial = tan−1  
 (1− e ) x + y 
2 2 2

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

Geodetic Coordinates and the Space Rectangular


Coordinates
A non-iterative solution to this conversion was proposed by
Soler and Hothem (1988) which is based on the works of
Bowring:

 y
λ = tan−1   in which:
x  
p = x2 + y 2
 z + e a sin µ 
2 3
ϕ = tan−1  
 p − e a cos µ 
2 3 r = p2 + z 2
 a2  z(1− f )  ae2 
h = p cosϕ + z sin ϕ −   tan µ = 1+ 
p  r 
N

The Reference Ellipsoid and the


Lecture 7 GE 161 – Geometric Geodesy Computation of the Geodetic Position:
Properties of the Ellipsoid

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