fbpx
Wikipedia

Bonne projection

The Bonne projection is a pseudoconical equal-area map projection, sometimes called a dépôt de la guerre,[1]: 104  modified Flamsteed,[1]: 104  or a Sylvanus projection.[1]: 92  Although named after Rigobert Bonne (1727–1795), the projection was in use prior to his birth, in 1511 by Sylvanus, Honter in 1561, De l'Isle before 1700 and Coronelli in 1696. Both Sylvanus and Honter's usages were approximate, however, and it is not clear they intended to be the same projection.[1]: 60 

Bonne projection of the world, standard parallel at 45°N.
Bonne projection with Tissot's indicatrix of deformation.
World map by Bernard Sylvanus, 1511

The Bonne projection maintains accurate shapes of areas along the central meridian and the standard parallel, but progressively distorts away from those regions. Thus, it best maps "t"-shaped regions. It has been used extensively for maps of Europe and Asia.[1]: 61 

The projection is defined as:

where

and φ is the latitude, λ is the longitude, λ0 is the longitude of the central meridian, and φ1 is the standard parallel of the projection.[2]

Parallels of latitude are concentric circular arcs, and the scale is true along these arcs. On the central meridian and the standard latitude shapes are not distorted.

The inverse projection is given by:

where

taking the sign of φ1.

Special cases of the Bonne projection include the sinusoidal projection, when φ1 is zero (i.e. the Equator), and the Werner projection, when φ1 is 90° (i.e. the North or South Pole). The Bonne projection can be seen as an intermediate projection in the unwinding of a Werner projection into a Sinusoidal projection; an alternative intermediate would be a Bottomley projection.[3]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e John Parr Snyder (1993). Flattening the Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections. ISBN 0-226-76747-7.
  2. ^ Map Projections - A Working Manual 2010-07-01 at the Wayback Machine, USGS Professional Paper 1395, John P. Snyder, 1987, pp. 138–140
  3. ^ Between the Sinusoidal projection and the Werner: an alternative to the Bonne, Henry Bottomley 2002

External links Edit

  • Table of examples and properties of all common projections, from radicalcartography.net
  • Bonne Projection (wolfram.com)


bonne, projection, pseudoconical, equal, area, projection, sometimes, called, dépôt, guerre, modified, flamsteed, sylvanus, projection, although, named, after, rigobert, bonne, 1727, 1795, projection, prior, birth, 1511, sylvanus, honter, 1561, isle, before, 1. The Bonne projection is a pseudoconical equal area map projection sometimes called a depot de la guerre 1 104 modified Flamsteed 1 104 or a Sylvanus projection 1 92 Although named after Rigobert Bonne 1727 1795 the projection was in use prior to his birth in 1511 by Sylvanus Honter in 1561 De l Isle before 1700 and Coronelli in 1696 Both Sylvanus and Honter s usages were approximate however and it is not clear they intended to be the same projection 1 60 Bonne projection of the world standard parallel at 45 N Bonne projection with Tissot s indicatrix of deformation World map by Bernard Sylvanus 1511The Bonne projection maintains accurate shapes of areas along the central meridian and the standard parallel but progressively distorts away from those regions Thus it best maps t shaped regions It has been used extensively for maps of Europe and Asia 1 61 The projection is defined as x r sin E y cot f 1 r cos E displaystyle begin aligned x amp rho sin E y amp cot varphi 1 rho cos E end aligned where r cot f 1 f 1 f E l l 0 cos f r displaystyle begin aligned rho amp cot varphi 1 varphi 1 varphi E amp frac lambda lambda 0 cos varphi rho end aligned and f is the latitude l is the longitude l0 is the longitude of the central meridian and f1 is the standard parallel of the projection 2 Parallels of latitude are concentric circular arcs and the scale is true along these arcs On the central meridian and the standard latitude shapes are not distorted The inverse projection is given by f cot f 1 f 1 r l l 0 r cos f arctan x cot f 1 y displaystyle begin aligned varphi amp cot varphi 1 varphi 1 rho lambda amp lambda 0 frac rho cos varphi arctan left frac x cot varphi 1 y right end aligned where r x 2 cot f 1 y 2 displaystyle rho pm sqrt x 2 left cot varphi 1 y right 2 taking the sign of f1 Special cases of the Bonne projection include the sinusoidal projection when f1 is zero i e the Equator and the Werner projection when f1 is 90 i e the North or South Pole The Bonne projection can be seen as an intermediate projection in the unwinding of a Werner projection into a Sinusoidal projection an alternative intermediate would be a Bottomley projection 3 See also EditList of map projectionsReferences Edit a b c d e John Parr Snyder 1993 Flattening the Earth Two Thousand Years of Map Projections ISBN 0 226 76747 7 Map Projections A Working Manual Archived 2010 07 01 at the Wayback Machine USGS Professional Paper 1395 John P Snyder 1987 pp 138 140 Between the Sinusoidal projection and the Werner an alternative to the Bonne Henry Bottomley 2002External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bonne projection Table of examples and properties of all common projections from radicalcartography net An interactive Java Applet to study the metric deformations of the Bonne Projection Bonne Projection wolfram com nbsp This cartography or mapping term article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bonne projection amp oldid 1132801890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.