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The following equations place the x-Axis of the projection on the equator and the
y-Axis at Longitude
, where
is the Longitude and
is the
Latitude.
| (1) | |||
| (2) | |||
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(3) | ||
| (4) | |||
| (5) | |||
| (6) |
| (7) | |||
| (8) |
An oblique form of the Mercator projection is illustrated above. It has equations
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(9) | ||
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(10) |
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| (11) | |||
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(12) | ||
| (13) |
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(14) | ||
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(15) |
There is also a transverse form of the Mercator projection, illustrated above. It is given by the equations
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(16) | ||
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(17) | ||
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(18) | ||
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(19) |
| (20) | |||
| (21) |
Finally, the ``universal transverse Mercator projection'' is a Map Projection which maps the Sphere into 60 zones of 6° each, with each zone mapped by a transverse Mercator projection with central Meridian in the center of the zone. The zones extend from 80° S to 84° N (Dana).
See also Gudermannian Function, Spherical Spiral
References
Dana, P. H. ``Map Projections.''
http://www.utexas.edu/depts/grg/gcraft/notes/mapproj/mapproj.html.
Snyder, J. P. Map Projections--A Working Manual. U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1395.
Washington, DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, pp. 38-75, 1987.
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© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein