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Mercator projection (Definition)

In a Mercator Projection the point on the sphere (of radius R) with longitude $L$ (positive East) and latitude $\lambda$ (positive North) is mapped to the point in the plane with coordinates $x,y$ :

$$ x = R L $$ $$ y = R \ln(\tan( \frac{\pi}{4} + \frac{\lambda}{2})) $$

The Mercator projection satisfies two important properties: it is conformal, that is it preserves angles, and it maps the sphere's parallels into straight line segments of length $2\pi R$ . (A parallel of latitude means a small circle comprised of points at a specified latitude).

Starting from these two properties we can derive the Mercator Projection. First note that a parallel of latitude $\lambda$ has length $2\pi R \cos( \lambda)$ . To make the projections of the parallels all the same length a stretching factor in longitude of $\frac{1}{\cos( \lambda)}$ will have to be applied. For the mapping to be conformal, the same stretching factor must be applied in latitude also. Note that the stretching factor varies with $\lambda$ so to map a specified latitude $\lambda_0$ to an ordinate $y$ we must evaluate an integral. $$ y = \int_{0}^{\lambda_0} (1/\cos( \lambda)) d\lambda $$ Early mapmakers such as Mercator evaluated this integral numerically to produce what is called a Table of Meridional Parts that can be used to map $\lambda_0$ into y. Later it was noticed that the integral of one over cosine actually has a closed form, leading to the expression for $y$ shown above.




"Mercator projection" is owned by acastaldo.
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See Also: Riemann sphere, conformality of stereographic projection

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Cross-references: expression, closed form, cosine, integral, ordinate, mapping, factor, projections, circle, length, line segments, straight, parallels, maps, angles, preserves, conformal, properties, coordinates, plane, latitude, positive, longitude, radius, sphere, point
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This is version 2 of Mercator projection, born on 2005-06-06, modified 2005-06-11.
Object id is 7145, canonical name is MercatorProjection.
Accessed 3942 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC86A30 (Geophysics :: Geodesy, mapping problems)

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