Albers projection
The Albers equal-area conic projection, or Albers projection (named after Heinrich C. Albers), is a conic, equal area map projection that uses two standard parallels. Although scale and shape are not preserved, distortion is minimal between the standard parallels.
The Albers projection is one of the standard projections for British Columbia,[1] and is the sole standard projection used by the government of Yukon.[2] It is also used by the United States Geological Survey and the United States Census Bureau.[3]
Snyder[4] (Section 14) describes generating formulae for the projection, as well as the projection's characteristics. Coordinates from a spherical datum can be transformed into Albers equal-area conic projection coordinates with the following formulas,[5] where λ is the longitude, λ0 the reference longitude, φ the latitude, φ0 the reference latitude and φ1 and φ2 the standard parallels:
where
See also
References
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External links
- Mathworld's page on the Albers projection
- Table of examples and properties of all common projections, from radicalcartography.net
- Yukon Albers Projection
- An interactive Java Applet to study the metric deformations of the Albers Projection.
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- ↑ British Columbia
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. This paper can be downloaded from USGS pages.
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