NAME¶
grdtrack - Sampling of a 2-D grdfile along 1-D trackline (a sequence of x,y
points)
SYNOPSIS¶
grdtrack xyfile -Ggrdfile [
-H[
nrec] ]
[
-L[
flag] ] [
-M[
flag] ] [
-Q ] [
-R west/east/south/north ] [
-S ] [
-V ] [
-Z ] [
-: ] [
-bi[
s][
n] ] [
-bo[
s][
n] ]
DESCRIPTION¶
grdtrack reads a grdfile and a table (from file or standard input) with
(x,y) positions in the first two columns (more columns may be present). It
interpolates the grid at the positions in the table and writes out the table
with the interpolated values added as a new column. A bicubic [Default] or
bilinear [
-Q] interpolation is used, requiring boundary conditions at
the limits of the region (see
-Lflag option).
- xyfile
- This is an ASCII [or binary, see -b] file where the
first 2 columns hold the (x,y) positions where the user wants to sample
the 2-D data set.
- -G
- grdfile is a 2-D binary grd file with the function
f(x,y).
OPTIONS¶
No space between the option flag and the associated arguments.
- -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.
- -L
- Boundary condition flag may be x or y
or xy indicating data is periodic in range of x or y or both set by
-R, or flag may be g indicating geographical
conditions (x and y are lon and lat). [Default uses "natural"
conditions (second partial derivative normal to edge is zero).] If no flag
is supplied, it is assumed that the x column contains longitudes, which
may differ from the region in -R by [multiples of] 360 degrees
[Default assumes no periodicity].
- -M
- Multiple segment file. Segment separator is a record
beginning with flag. [Default is '>'].
- -Q
- Quick mode. Use bilinear rather than bicubic
interpolation.
- -R
- west, east, south, and north specify the
Region of interest. To specify boundaries in degrees and minutes [and
seconds], use the dd:mm[:ss] format. Append r if lower left and
upper right map coordinates are given instead of wesn.
- -S
- Suppress the output of interpolated points that result in
NaN values.
- -V
- Selects verbose mode, which will send progress reports to
stderr [Default runs "silently"].
- -Z
- Only write out the sampled z-values [Default writes all
columns].
- -:
- Toggles between (lon,lat) and (lat,lon) input/output.
[Default is (lon,lat)]
- -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].
- -bo
- Selects binary output. Append s for single precision
[Default is double].
HINTS¶
If an interpolation point is not on a node of the input grid, then a NaN at any
node in the neighborhood surrounding the point will yield an interpolated NaN.
Bicubic interpolation [default] yields continuous first derivatives but
requires a neighborhood of 4 nodes by 4 nodes. Bilinear interpolation [
-Q] uses only a 2 by 2 neighborhood, but yields only zeroth-order
continuity. Use bicubic when smoothness is important. Use bilinear to minimize
the propagation of NaNs.
EXAMPLES¶
To sample the file hawaii_topo.grd along the SEASAT track track_4.xyg (An ASCII
table containing longitude, latitude, and SEASAT-derived gravity, preceeded by
one header record), try
grdtrack track_4.xyg
-Ghawaii_topo.grd
-H > track_4.xygt
SEE ALSO¶
gmt(1gmt),
surface(1gmt),
sample1d(1gmt)