State Plane Coordinates vs. Surface Coordinates, Part 2. by James P.Reilly, Ph.D. July 7, 2000
When the state plane coordinate system was established, the authors
described the system in simple terms, easily understood by users. Figure 1 shows a
two-dimensional coordinate system familiar to just about everybody. Today we would call
this an x, y rectangular coordinate system or a two-dimensional right-handed Cartesian
coordinate system. The authors of the state plane coordinate system called it a grid. The
following quote from Coast and Geodetic Survey Special Publication No. 235, "The
State Coordinate Systems," shows how they described it.
As
with any plane-rectangular coordinate system, a projection employed in establishing a
State coordinate system may be represented by two sets of parallel lines, intersecting at
right angles. The network thus formed is termed a grid. One set of these lines is parallel
to the plane of the meridian passing approximately through the center of the area shown on
the grid, and the grid line corresponding to that meridian is the Axis of Y of the grid.
It is also termed the central meridian of the grid. Forming right angles with the Axis of
Y and to the south of the area shown on the grid is the Axis of X. The point of
intersection of these axes is the origin of coordinates. The position of a point
represented on the grid can be defined by stating two distances, termed coordinates. One
of these distances, known as the x-coordinate, gives the position in an east-and-west
direction. The other distance, known as the y-coordinate, gives the position in a
north-and-south direction; this coordinate is always positive. The x-coordinates increase
in size, numerically, from west to east; the y-coordinates increase in size from south to
north. All x-coordinates in an area represented on a State grid are made positive by
assigning the origin the coordinates: x = 0 plus a large constant. For any point, then,
the x-coordinate equals the value of x adopted for the origin, plus or minus the distance
(x') of the point east or west from the central meridian (Axis of Y); and the y-coordinate
equals the perpendicular distance to the point from the Axis of X. The linear unit of the
State coordinate systems is the foot of 12 inches defined by the equivalence: 1
international meter = 39.37 inches exactly.
The linear distance between two points on a State coordinate system,
as obtained by computation or scaled from the grid, is termed the grid length of the line
connecting those points. The angle between a line on the grid and the Axis of Y,
reckoned clockwise from the south through 360°, is the grid azimuth of the line. The
computations involved in obtaining a grid length and a grid azimuth from grid coordinates
are performed by means of the formulas of plane trigonometry.
The state coordinate system was developed so there would be a direct relationship between
geodetic coordinates, latitude and longitude, and grid coordinates, x and y. This is
explained as follows:
For more than a century the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey
has engaged in geodetic operations which determined the geodetic positions - the
latitudes and longitudes -of thousands of monumented points distributed through the
country. These latitudes and longitudes are on an ideal figure - a spheroid of
reference which closely approaches the sea-level surface of the Earth. By mathematical
processes, the positions of the grid lines of a State coordinate system are determined
with respect to the meridians and parallels of the spheroid of reference. A point that is
defined by stating its latitude and longitude on the spheroid of reference may also be
defined by stating its x- and y-coordinate on a state grid. If either position is known,
the other can be derived by formal mathematical computation. So too with lengths and
azimuths: the geodetic length and azimuth between two positions can be transformed into a
grid length and azimuth by mathematical operations. Or the process may be reversed when
grid values are known and geodetic values are desired.
In general, any survey computations involving the use of geodetic
position data can also be accomplished with the corresponding grid data; but with this
difference: results obtained with geodetic data are exact, but they require the use of
involved and tedious spherical formulas and of special tables. On the other hand, results
obtained with grid data are not exact, since they involve certain allowances that must be
made in the transfer of survey data from the curved surface of the Earth (spheroid) to the
plane surface of a State coordinate system; but the computations with the grid data are
quite simple, being made with the ordinary formulas of plane surveying; and with the State
coordinate systems, exact correlation of grid values and grid values and geodetic values
is readily obtained by simple mathematical procedures.
In modern
geodesy the expression "ellipsoid of revolution" has replaced
"spheroid." Notice the statements about the direct relationship between geodetic
coordinates and state plane grid coordinates. That relationship doesn't exist if one
uses surface coordinates.
Some people are confused when the expression "map projections"
is used. The state coordinate systems put an ellipsoidal-shaped Earth on a flat plane at
an accuracy acceptable for surveying, and in order to do this the U. S. Coast and Geodetic
Survey selected map projections that cartographers use to put a round earth on flat paper.
By using a conformal map projection as the base for a state
coordinate system and limiting one dimension of the area which is to be covered by a
single grid, two things are accomplished [this is a repeat from Part 1, but worded
differently].
On a conformal map projection, angles are preserved. This means
that, at a given point, the difference between geodetic and grid azimuths of very short
lines is a constant, and angles on the earth formed by such lines are truly represented on
the map. For practical purposes of land surveying, this condition holds for distances up
to about ten miles. For longer lines, the difference varies, and the correction to be
applied to an observed (geodetic) angle to obtain a corresponding grid angle is the
difference of the corrections to the azimuths of the lines, separately derived.
"The limitation in the width of the projection or grid permits a
control of deviations of grid lengths from geodetic lengths. When the width of an area
covered by a single grid is 158 statue miles, the extreme difference between geodetic and
grid lengths will be 1/10,000 of the length of a line, which is quite satisfactory for
most land surveys.
"Deviations
of grid lengths from geodetic lengths will be a maximum along the margins of the longer
dimension of the grid and midway between those margins. Along the margins, the grid length
of a line will be greater than its geodetic length; along the center line, the geodetic
length will be the greater. Between these limits are two lines along which grid and
geodetic lengths are equal: these are lines of exact scale. The quantity by which a
geodetic length is multiplied to obtain the corresponding grid length is termed a scale
factor. It is greater than unity [one] outside the lines of exact scale; decreases to
unity along those lines; and continues to decrease to a minimum about midway between them.
The magnitude of the scale factor at any point depends upon the position of the point with
respect to the lines of exact scale. It is constant along a line - any line - which
is parallel with the lines of exact scale. These lines of equal scale correction are grid
lines on the transverse Mercator grid, being parallel with the central meridian or Axis of
Y; on the Lambert grid they are curved lines, being parallels of latitude. Scale factors
[are simple to calculate]. For any given survey line, the scale factor may be readily
ascertained and applied to the geodetic length of the line to obtain its grid length; or
in an inverse operation, employed in obtaining a geodetic from a grid length. Where the
exact length of a line is desired, it is thus easily obtained. It must be remembered that
a geodetic length is a distance on the spheroid (sea level surface of the Earth), whose
relationship to the corresponding ground-level distance may be expressed by very simple
formulas and accurately illustrated by a geometrical figure. On the other hand, a grid
length is a distance on a plane which is mathematically related to the spheroid, so that
the relationship between corresponding lengths on the two surfaces can be expressed by
mathematical formulas, but [cannot be graphically demonstrated]. The commonly used
examples of a developed cone for the Lambert grid and a developed cylinder for the
transverse Mercator grid are inexact and serve only as illustrations.
While a width of 158 statue miles was adopted as a standard in
devising the State coordinate systems, departures from that width have been made where
geographic conditions permitted or surveying requirements justified the change. If the
width of a State is less than 158 miles, the width of the grid was decreased and the
effect of the scale factor thereby also decreased. The narrower the strip on the
Earth's surface which it is desired to portray on a plane, the smaller will be the
distortion involved in the process. The north-south dimension of Connecticut is less than
80 miles: the maximum scale factor for the Connecticut coordinate system, (Figure 2 on p.
18) along the northern and southern boundaries of the State, expressed as a ratio, is
around 1:40,000. Midway between the lines of exact scale it is 1:79,000. Where a state is
too wide to be covered by a single grid, it is divided into belts, called zones, for each
of which a separate grid is adopted. The boundary lines between zones follow county lines.
The limiting scale factors for the various zones of a State coordinate system need not be
the same. For example, the Illinois Coordinate System, (Figure 3 on p. 18) comprises two
zones. The eastern zone, in which Chicago is located, has much smaller scale factors than
the western zone. One thing sought in devising the State coordinate system was to keep the
number of zones in any State to a minimum, consistent with the requirements of scale
accuracy. For example, by allowing the scale ratio to go slightly above 1:10,000, the
entire State of Texas was divided into five zones.
Long article. Because of the length, I eliminated at least two sketches
that might have made the description clearer; these will be included in the next column.
Remember, the state coordinate systems discussed refer to the NAD 27, the North American
Datum of 1927. Changes were made for the North American Datum of 1983.
James P.Reilly, Ph.D. jpreilly@nmsu.edu James P. Reilly, PhD., is a past president of ACSM and retired department head of the Department of Surveying Engineering at New Mexico State University.
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