Hammer retroazimuthal projection

Retroazimuthal map projection
The full Hammer retroazimuthal projection, 15° graticule, centered on the north pole.
The full Hammer retroazimuthal projection centered on Mecca, with Tissot's indicatrix of deformation. Back hemisphere has been rotated 180° to avoid overlap.

The Hammer retroazimuthal projection is a modified azimuthal proposed by Ernst Hermann Heinrich Hammer in 1910. As a retroazimuthal projection, azimuths (directions) are correct from any point to the designated center point.[1] Additionally, all distances from the center of the map are proportional to what they are on the globe. In whole-world presentation, the back and front hemispheres overlap, making the projection a non-injective function. The back hemisphere can be rotated 180° to avoid overlap, but in this case, any azimuths measured from the back hemisphere must be corrected.

Given a radius R for the projecting globe, the projection is defined as:

x = R K cos φ 1 sin ( λ λ 0 ) y = R K ( sin φ 1 cos φ cos φ 1 sin φ cos ( λ λ 0 ) ) {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}x&=RK\cos \varphi _{1}\sin(\lambda -\lambda _{0})\\y&=-RK{\big (}\sin \varphi _{1}\cos \varphi -\cos \varphi _{1}\sin \varphi \cos(\lambda -\lambda _{0}){\big )}\end{aligned}}}

where

K = z sin z {\displaystyle K={\frac {z}{\sin z}}}

and

cos z = sin φ 1 sin φ + cos φ 1 cos φ cos ( λ λ 0 ) {\displaystyle \cos z=\sin \varphi _{1}\sin \varphi +\cos \varphi _{1}\cos \varphi \cos(\lambda -\lambda _{0})}

The latitude and longitude of the point to be plotted are φ and λ respectively, and the center point to which all azimuths are to be correct is given as φ1 and λ0.

See also

References

  1. ^ Snyder, John P. (1993). Flattening the Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 228–229. ISBN 0-226-76747-7. Retrieved 2011-11-14.

External links

  • Description of Hammer Retroazimuthal front hemisphere.
  • Description of Hammer Retroazimuthal back hemisphere.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Map projection
Cylindrical
Mercator-conformal
Equal-area
Pseudocylindrical
Equal-area
Conical
Pseudoconical
Azimuthal
(planar)
General perspective
Pseudoazimuthal
Conformal
Equal-area
Bonne
Bottomley
Cylindrical
Tobler hyperelliptical
Equidistant in
some aspect
Gnomonic
Loxodromic
Retroazimuthal
(Mecca or Qibla)
Compromise
Hybrid
Perspective
Planar
Polyhedral
See also