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Cassini Cylindrical Projection (-–Jc -–JC)

     

This cylindrical projection was developed in 1745 by C. F. Cassini for the survey of France. It is occasionally called Cassini-Soldner since the latter provided the more accurate mathematical analysis that led to the development of the ellipsoidal formulae. The projection is neither conformal nor equal-area, and behaves as a compromise between the two end-members. The distortion is zero along the central meridian. It is best suited for mapping regions of north-south extent. The central meridian, each meridian 90o away, and equator are straight lines; all other meridians and parallels are complex curves. The requirements to define this projection are:

$\bullet$
Longitude and latitude of central point

$\bullet$
Scale in inch/degree or as 1:xxxxx (-Jc), or map width (-–JC)

A detailed map of the island of Sardinia centered on the 8o45’'E meridian using the Cassini projection can be obtained by running the command:





gmtset LABEL_FONT_SIZE 12
pscoast -R7:30/38:30/10:30/41:30r -JC8.75/40/2.5i -B1g1f30m -Lf9.5/38.8/40/60 -Dh -G200 -W0.25p \
   -Ia/0.5p -P >! GMT_cassini.ps






  
Figure 5.22: Cassini map over Sardinia
\begin{figure}\centering\epsfig{figure=eps/GMT_cassini.eps}\end{figure}

As with the previous projections, the user can choose between a rectangular boundary (used here) or a geographical (WESN) boundary.

     


next up previous contents index
Next: Cylindrical Equidistant Projection (-–Jq Up: Cylindrical Projections Previous: Oblique Mercator (–-Jo -–JO)
Paul Wessel
1999-12-03