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Spatial Analysis (3D)

Spatial Analysis (3D) . Some (More) GIS Queries. How steep is the road? Which direction does the hill face? What does the horizon look like? What is that object over there? Where will the waste flow? What’s the fastest route home?. Types of queries.

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Spatial Analysis (3D)

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  1. Spatial Analysis (3D) CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  2. Some (More) GIS Queries • How steep is the road? • Which direction does the hill face? • What does the horizon look like? • What is that object over there? • Where will the waste flow? • What’s the fastest route home? CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  3. Types of queries • Aspatial – make no reference to spatial data • 2-D Spatial – make reference to spatial data in the plane • 3-D Spatial – make reference to “elevational” data • Network – involve analyzing a network in the GIS (yes, it’s spatial) CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  4. 1984 technology 1997 technology 3-D Computational Complexity CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  5. Approximations • In the vector model, each object represents exactly one feature; it is “linked” to its complete set of attribute data • In the raster model, each cell represents exactly one piece of data; the data is specifically for that cell • THE DATA IS DISCRETE!!! CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  6. Image from: http://www.ian-ko.com/resources/triangulated_irregular_network.htm Surface Approximations With a surface, only a few points have “true data” The “values” at other points are only an approximation The are determined (somehow) by the neighboring points The surface is CONTINUOUS CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  7. Types of approximation • GLOBAL or LOCAL • Does the approximation function use all points or just “nearby” ones? • EXACT or APPROXIMATE • At the points where we do have data, is the approximation equal to that data? CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  8. Types of approximation • GRADUAL or ABRUPT • Does the approximation function vary continuously or does it “step” at boundaries? • DETERMINISTIC or STOCHASTIC • Is there a randomness component to the approximation? CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  9. Display “by point” Image from: http://www.csc.noaa.gov/products/nchaz/htm/lidtut.htm CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  10. Display “by contour” Image from: http://www.csc.noaa.gov/products/nchaz/htm/lidtut.htm CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  11. Display “by surface” Image from: http://www.csc.noaa.gov/products/nchaz/htm/lidtut.htm CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  12. Voronoi (Theissen) polygons • Points on the surface are approximated by giving them the value of the nearest data point • Exact, abrupt, deterministic CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  13. Matt Hartloff, ‘2000 • Delaunay “Sweep” algorithm CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  14. Matt Hartloff, continued • Jackson Hole CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  15. 1- X w y W = *y + (1-)*x Smooth Shading • Standard (linear) interpolation leads to smooth shaded images • Local, exact, gradual, deterministic CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  16. or Image from: http://www.ian-ko.com/resources/triangulated_irregular_network.htm TINs – Triangulated Irregular Networks • Connect “adjacent” data points via lines to form triangles, then interpolate • Local, exact, gradual, possibly stochastic CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  17. Simple Queries? • The descriptions thus far represent “simple” queries, in the same sense that length, area, etc. did for 2-D. • A more complex query would involve comparing the various data points in some way CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  18. slope aspect Slope and aspect • A natural question with elevational data is to ask how rapidly that data is changing, e.g. “What is the gradient?” • Another natural question is to ask what direction the slope is facing, i.e. “What is the normal?” CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  19. What is slope? • The slope of a curve (or surface) is represented by a linear approximation to a data set. • Can be solved for using algebra and/or calculus Image from: http://oregonstate.edu/dept/math/CalculusQuestStudyGuides/vcalc/tangent/tangent.html CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  20. Solving for slope • In a raster world, we use the equation for a plane: z = a*x + b*y + c and we solve for a “best fit” • In a vector world, it is usually computed as the TIN is formed (viz. the way area is pre-computed for polygons) CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  21. Our friend calculus • Slope is essentially a first derivative • Second derivatives are also useful for… convexity computations CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  22. Image from: http://www.friends-of-fpc.org/tutorials/graphics/dlx_ogl/teil12_6.gif What is aspect? • Aspect is what mathematicians would call a “normal” • Computed arithmetically from equation of plane Shows what direction the surface “faces” CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  23. Visibility • What can I see from where? • Tough to compute! CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  24. What is an elevation? • It could be an ELEVATION, i.e. an altitude • BUT, it could be rainfall, income, or any other scalar measurement • Bottom Line: It’s one more dimension on top of the geographic data CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  25. Network Analysis • Given a network • What is the shortest path from s to t? • What is the cheapest route from s to t? • How much “flow” can we get through the network? • What is the shortest route visiting all points? Image from: http://www.eli.sdsu.edu/courses/fall96/cs660/notes/NetworkFlow/NetworkFlow.html#RTFToC2 CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  26. Network complexities All answers learned in CS 232! CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

  27. Conclusions • A GIS without spatial analysis is like a car without a gas pedal. • A GIS without 3-D spatial analysis is like a car without a radio. It may still be useful, but you wish you had the “luxury”. CS 128/ES 228 - Lecture 13b

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