NAME¶
fitcircle - find mean position and pole of best-fit great [or small] circle to
points on a sphere.
SYNOPSIS¶
fitcircle [
xyfile ]
-Lnorm [
-H[
nrec]
] [
-S ] [
-V ] [
-: ] [
-bi[
s][
n] ]
DESCRIPTION¶
fitcircle reads lon,lat [or lat,lon] values from the first two columns on
standard input [or
xyfile]. These are converted to cartesian
three-vectors on the unit sphere. Then two locations are found: the mean of
the input positions, and the pole to the great circle which best fits the
input positions. The user may choose one or both of two possible solutions to
this problem. The first is called
-L1 and the second is called
-L2. When the data are closely grouped along a great circle both
solutions are similar. If the data have large dispersion, the pole to the
great circle will be less well determined than the mean. Compare both
solutions as a qualitative check.
The
-L1 solution is so called because it approximates the minimization of
the sum of absolute values of cosines of angular distances. This solution
finds the mean position as the Fisher average of the data, and the pole
position as the Fisher average of the cross-products between the mean and the
data. Averaging cross-products gives weight to points in proportion to their
distance from the mean, analogous to the "leverage" of distant
points in linear regression in the plane.
The
-L2 solution is so called because it approximates the minimization of
the sum of squares of cosines of angular distances. It creates a 3 by 3 matrix
of sums of squares of components of the data vectors. The eigenvectors of this
matrix give the mean and pole locations. This method may be more subject to
roundoff errors when there are thousands of data. The pole is given by the
eigenvector corresponding to the smallest eigenvalue; it is the least-well
represented factor in the data and is not easily estimated by either method.
- -L
- Specify the desired norm as 1 or 2, or use -L
or -L3 to see both solutions.
OPTIONS¶
- xyfile
- ASCII [or binary, see -b] file containing lon,lat
[lat,lon] values in the first 2 columns. If no file is specified,
fitcircle will read from standard input.
- -H
- Input file(s) has Header record(s). Number of header
records can be changed by editing your .gmtdefaults file. If used,
GMT default is 1 header record.
- -S
- Attempt to fit a small circle instead of a great circle.
The pole will be constrained to lie on the great circle connecting the
pole of the best-fit great circle and the mean location of the data.
- -V
- Selects verbose mode, which will send progress reports to
stderr [Default runs "silently"].
- -:
- Toggles between (longitude,latitude) and
(latitude,longitude) input/output. [Default is (longitude,latitude)].
Applies to geographic coordinates only.
- -bi
- Selects binary input. Append s for single precision
[Default is double]. Append n for the number of columns in the
binary file(s). [Default is 2 input columns].
EXAMPLES¶
Suppose you have lon,lat,grav data along a twisty ship track in the file
ship.xyg. You want to project this data onto a great circle and resample it in
distance, in order to filter it or check its spectrum. Try:
fitcircle ship.xyg
-L2
project ship.xyg
-Cox/
oy
-Tpx/
py -S -pz | sample1d
-S-100
-I1 > output.pg
Here,
ox/
oy is the lon/lat of the mean from
fitcircle, and
px/
py is the lon/lat of the pole. The file output.pg has
distance, gravity data sampled every 1 km along the great circle which best
fits ship.xyg
SEE ALSO¶
gmt(1gmt),
project(1gmt),
sample1d(1gmt)