Lecture Note Gis-SYM
Lecture Note Gis-SYM
MHASKE
Lecture Notes
On
By
Prof. S.Y.Mhaske
[email protected]
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
1 Components of a GIS:
Geographical information system have three important components they are
i. Computer hardware
ii .Set of application software modules
iii .and a proper organizational contest
2. Types of Data:
i. Spatial Data
ii. Non-spatial Data or Attribute data
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
Spatial Data :-
It is something mappable. The spatial data or georefernced data are commonly
characterized by having two fundamental components
a) The physical dimension or class i.e. phenomenon being reported e.g. rock type,
vegetation type details
b) The Spatial Location of the phenomena e.g. Location , specified with reference to
common coordinate system .( Latitude and Departure)
Spatial data describes the absolute and relative location of geographic features.
It can be discrete or continuous.
Attribute data are non-spatial data associated with time and area entities. It is generally
referred to as Tabular data.
The GIS attributes are represented using colours, textures and linear or graphic symbols.
The actual Value of the attribute that is measured or sampled and stored in the database is
called attribute value.
Many Commercial GIS software store attribute data separately from spatial data system,
known as the Georelational model. Spatial data are stored in graphic files and managed
by a file manager system, but attribute data are stored in relational database.
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
The object-oriented data model system eliminates the complexity of coordinates and
synchronizes the spatial data and attribute data, and GIS brings closer to other
information system.
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
Raster Model divides the entire study area into regular grid of cells in a
specific sequence
It is space filling and every location in the study area corresponds to a cell in
the raster
One set of cells and associated values is a layer (soil, landuse, elevation etc.)
Raster model tells what occurs at each place in the area
o To create a raster layer, lay a grid pattern over a map (like soil) and code
each cell with a value that represents the soil type
o Cell is called as raster or grid or pixel
o These coded values are in ASCII and can be entered manually through
keyboard. It will be time consuming and tedious
o Currently scanners are used to create raster data layers
o Remote Sensing directly gives the digital data raster model
o GIS tools provide facilities for conversion of vector to raster layers
o
5.1.2 RASTER DIGITAL DATA SOURCES
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
Resolution
Resolution can be defined as the minimum linear dimension of the
smallest unit of geographical space for which data are encoded
Higher resolution refers to raster with small cell dimensions. It gives more
detail and the storage requirement increases
Orientation
Angle between true north and the direction defined by the columns of the
raster
Zone
Each zone of a map layer is a set of contiguous locations that exhibit the
same value
Example : Villages, Soil types
All individual zones that have the same characteristics is called as a class
Value
Location
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
COLUMNS
0123456789
ROWS
0
1
2
A
3
4
B
5
6
7
D
8 C
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MAP
Map
Full Raster Encoding (100 values) Run Length Encoding (54 values) Value Point
Encoding (32 values)
COLUMNS VALUE LENGTH ROW VALUE POINT
Rows 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A 10 0 A 23
0 A A A A A A A A A A A 10 1 B 29
1 A A A A A A A A A A A 4 2 A 32
2 A A A A B B B B B B B 6 2 B 30
3 A A A B B B B B B B A 3 3 D 43
4 D D D D B B B B B B B 7 3 B 49
5 D D D D D B B B B B D 4 4 D 54
6 D D D D C C C C C C B 6 4 B 59
7 D D D D C C C C C C D 5 5 D 64
8 D D D D C C C C C C B 5 5 C 69
9 D D D D C C C C C C D 5 6 D 74
10 D D D D C C C C C C C 5 6 C 79
D 5 7 D 84
C 5 7 C 89
D 5 8 D 94
C 5 8 C 99
D 5 9
C 5 9
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
c) Quadtree
More compact raster representation using a variable sized grid cells
Process of regularly subdividing a map into four equal sized quadrants. Quadrant
that has more than one class is again subdivided.
Root is a point from which all branches expand
Leaf is a lower most point.
All other points in the tree are nodes
Type 1 (Nontopological)
Every polygon is stored as a sequence of coordinates
Common boundaries between two nearby areas are coded twice
once for each polygon
Type 2 (Topologically structure)
• Every arc is stored as a sequence of coordinates
• Areas are built by linking arcs
• Shared boundary is stored only once
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
1. The raster data structures is less compact 1. It is a more complex data structures than
a simple raster.
2. Topological relationships are more 2. Overlay operations are more difficult to
difficult to represent. implement.
3. The output of graphics is les 3. The Representation of high spatial
aesthetically pleasing because boundaries variability is inefficient.
tend to have a blocky appearance rather
than the smooth lines of hand drawn
maps. This can be overcome by using a
very large number of cells, but may result
in unacceptable, large files
4.Manipulation and enhancement of 4. Manipulation and enhancement of
digital images can be effectively done digital images cannot be effectively done
in the raster domain in the vector domain
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
Political Science
Redistricting
Analysis of election results
Predictive modeling
Business
Demographic Analysis
Market Penetration/ Share Analysis
Site Selection
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
Education Administration
Attendance Area
Maintenance
Enrollment Projections
School Bus Routing
Civil Engineering/Utility
Locating underground facilities
Designing alignment for freeways, transit
Coordination of infrastructure maintenance
Real Estate
Neighborhood land prices
Traffic Impact Analysis
Determination of Highest and Best Use
Health Care
Epidemiology
Needs Analysis
Service Inventory
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
Watershed Analysis
Location Of Recycling Depots
Water Resources management As Integrated approach
Route Generation
Urban Planning (Minting Of Master plans)
Communication And Tracking For Construction Vehicles
Solid Waste Collection
Distributed Rainfall Runoff
Geospatial Explorer
Geostatistics Package
FIELDS 3-D Viewer
Natural Neighbour for ArcView
MapInfo Callback Manager DLL
GIS Developer Kernel (DK)
GIS Internet Map Server
ArcExplorer
MapInfo ProViewer
ER Viewer
ECW Compression/Decompression SDK for MacOS
Free ECW Compressor
dlgv32- for viewing USGS digital cartographic
Geomatica FreeView
SPANS Observer
Map Info professional
MapInfo ProViewer
GRASS GIS
ERDAS
Spatial Console
NAPIS Lite
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ArcExplorer
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VJTI /SYBTECH(CIVIL)/ GEOMATICS-II/PROF.S.Y.MHASKE
The Following Research projects on GIS are going in Civil and Environmental
Engineering Department under the guidance of Prof. S.Y. Mhaske:-
References :-
3. Concept and Techniques of Geographic Information Systems ,by C.P. Lo, Albert K.W.
Yeung, prentice-hall of India, New Delhi.
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