How do I calculate the Azimuth (angle to north) between two WGS84 coordinates

亡梦爱人 提交于 2019-12-18 11:11:50

问题


I have got two WGS84 coordinates, latitude and longitude in degrees. These points are rather close together, e.g. only one metre apart.

Is there an easy way to calculate the azimuth of the line between these points, that is, the angle to north?

The naive approach would be to assume a Cartesian coordinate system (because these points are so close together) and just use

sin(a) = abs(L2-L1) / sqrt(sqr(L2-L1) + sqr(B2-B1))

a = azimuth L1, L2 = longitude B1, B2 = latitude

The error will be larger as the coordinates move away from the equator because there the distance between two longitudinal degrees becomes increasingly smaller than the one between two latitudinal degrees (which remains constant).

I found some quite complex formulas which I don't really want to implement because they seem to be overkill for points that are that close together and I don't need very high precision (two decimals are enough, one is probably fine either since there are other factors that reduce precision anyway, like the one the GPS returns).

Maybe I could just determine an approximate longitudinal correction factor depending on latitude and use somthing like this:

sin(a) = abs(L2*f-L1*f) / sqrt(sqr(L2*f-L1*f) + sqr(B2-B1))

where f is the correction factor

Any hints?

(I don't want to use any libraries for this, especially not ones that require runtime licenses. Any MPLed Delphi Source would be great.)


回答1:


The formulas that you refer to in the text are to calculate the great circle distance between 2 points. Here's how I calculate the angle between points:

uses Math, ...;
...

const
  cNO_ANGLE=-999;

...

function getAngleBetweenPoints(X1,Y1,X2,Y2:double):double;
var
  dx,dy:double;
begin
  dx := X2 - X1;
  dy := Y2 - Y1;

  if (dx > 0) then  result := (Pi*0.5) - ArcTan(dy/dx)   else
  if (dx < 0) then  result := (Pi*1.5) - ArcTan(dy/dx)   else
  if (dy > 0) then  result := 0                          else
  if (dy < 0) then  result := Pi                         else
                    result := cNO_ANGLE; // the 2 points are equal

  result := RadToDeg(result);
end;
  • Remember to handle the situation where 2 points are equal (check if the result equals cNO_ANGLE, or modify the function to throw an exception);

  • This function assumes that you're on a flat surface. With the small distances that you've mentioned this is all fine, but if you're going to be calculating the heading between cities all over the world you might want to look into something that takes the shape of the earth in count;

  • It's best to provide this function with coordinates that are already mapped to a flat surface. You could feed WGS84 Latitude directly into Y (and lon into X) to get a rough approximation though.




回答2:


Here is the C# solution. Tested for 0, 45, 90, 135, 180, 225, 270 and 315 angles.

Edit I replaced my previous ugly solution, by the C# translation of Wouter's solution:

public double GetAzimuth(LatLng destination)
{
    var longitudinalDifference = destination.Lng - this.Lng;
    var latitudinalDifference = destination.Lat - this.Lat;
    var azimuth = (Math.PI * .5d) - Math.Atan(latitudinalDifference / longitudinalDifference);
    if (longitudinalDifference > 0) return azimuth;
    else if (longitudinalDifference < 0) return azimuth + Math.PI;
    else if (latitudinalDifference < 0) return Math.PI;
    return 0d;
}

public double GetDegreesAzimuth(LatLng destination)
{
    return RadiansToDegreesConversionFactor * GetAzimuth(destination);
}



回答3:


I found this link

http://williams.best.vwh.net/avform.htm

given in the answer to

Lat/Lon + Distance + Heading --> Lat/Lon

This looks promising, especially the flat earth approximation given near the end.




回答4:


This would work only for small differences. Otherwise you can't just "latitudinalDifference / longitudinalDifference".




回答5:


I would recommend implementing a correction factor based on the longitude. I implemented a simular routine once to return all geocoded records within x miles of a specific spot and ran into simular issues. Unfortunately I don't have the code anymore, and can't seem to recall how I got to the correction number but you are on the right track.




回答6:


Has anyone tested this? It does not return the correct answers

This function assumes that you're on a flat surface. With the small distances that you've mentioned this is all fine, but if you're going to be calculating the heading between cities all over the world you might want to look into something that takes the shape of the earth in count;

Your flat earth has little to do with this. The error, as you call it, is because you are calculating an initial azimuth from a point. Unless you are heading straight to a pole, you relationship to the pole will change with distance. Regardless, the above program does not return correct results.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/642555/how-do-i-calculate-the-azimuth-angle-to-north-between-two-wgs84-coordinates

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!