RockWorks | Utilities | Map | Sphereplot |
3D Projection - Points
This program creates a dynamic spherical display in RockPlot3D. It reads user-entered longitude and latitude coordinates from the main datasheet for plotting of individual points on the global map. It also offers global reference items (coastlines, islands, rivers) from a program database. (See the EarthApps for point maps output to Google Earth.)
Applications include seismic events, volcanoes, ocean temperatures, atmospheric temperatures, etc. Note that our discussion refers to the planet Earth but, aside from the Earth-specific geographical features, you can certainly apply this tool to other spherical bodies.
Menu Options
Step-by-Step Summary
Menu Options
- Input Columns: The prompts along the left side of the window tell RockWorks which columns in the input datasheet contain what data.
Click on an existing name to select a different name from the drop-down list. See a sample data layout below.
- X (Longitude), Y (Latitude): Select the columns in the main datasheet that contain the longitude (east/west) and latitude (north/south) coordinates for individual points to be plotted on the cylindrical map. These selections will be ignored if the Symbols option, below, is not activated.
- Longitudes in the Western Hemisphere (e.g. North & South America) must be entered as negative values.
- Longitudes in the Eastern Hemisphere (e.g. Asia & Australia) must be entered as positive values.
- Latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere (e.g. Australia) must be entered as negative values.
- Latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere (e.g. Siberia) must be enteres as positive values.
- Check this! It will assure that the data is placed on the appropriate side of the planet!
- The longitudes and latitudes must be entered in decimal degrees. If your data is in degrees/minutes/seconds, you must first use the Coords | Coordinate Converter - Multiple Points conversion utility first.
- Points: Insert a check in this box if there are point locations listed in the main RockWorks data sheet that are to be plotted as spheres on the 3D spherical map. These locations should be specified in the left pane of the window, in the X and Y column prompts. Expand this heading to establish the sphere settings.
- Color:
- Fixed: Click in this radio button for all spheres to be plotted in the same color. Expand this heading to select the color.
- Variable: Click here if the spheres are to be colored differently. Expand the heading to select the column in the datasheet that lists the individual point colors.
- Size:
- Fixed: Click in this radio button if the spheres are to be plotted at a constant size. Expand this heading and enter the dimensions for the sphere radii in kilometers.
- Variable: Click here if the spheres are to be variably sized, based on values in the datasheet. Expand this heading to select the column in the datasheet in which the sphere radii in kilometers are listed.
- Radius: This determines how far out from the middle of the earth the point spheres will be plotted.
- Fixed: Click in this radio button to have all points plotted at the same distance from the earth center. Expand this heading to enter the distance for the sphere centers, in kilometer units. Tip: See the defaults listed below for the different earth and atmospheric structures for reference.
- Variable: Click in this button if the spheres vary in their locations. Expand the heading to select the name of the column in the datasheet in which the radius distances are listed. This can be useful for displaying earthquake centers at varying depths or air samples at different atmospheric levels. Distances must be entered in kilometer units.
- Labels: Insert a check here to include labels with the symbols. Expand this heading to establish label settings.
- Column: Click to select the datasheet column in which the label text is listed.
- Color: Define the color for the label text.
- Size: Click to enter a font size.
- Radius: This defines how far from the earth center the labels will plot, in kilometers. If you want the labels displayed at the same level as the points, be sure to enter the same value as you did for the sphere radius, above. Tip: For reference, see the defaults listed below for the different earth and atmospheric structures.
- Leaders: If you would like small lines to connect the labels with their symbols, insert a check in this check-box. Expand this heading to select the line color.
- Spheres: Expand this heading to select which reference spheres, if any, are to be plotted. The kilometer radii listed below are the defaults, but you can modify these as you wish.
- Ionosphere: 6,728 km.
- Mesosphere: 6,468 km.
- Stratosphere: 6,428 km.
- Ozone Layer: 6,423 km.
- Tropopause: 6,398 km.
Troposphere: 6,393 km.
- Crust: 6,378 km. (This is the earth surface.)
- Outer Core: 3,478 km.
- Inner Core: 1,278 km.
- Reference Items: Expand this heading to select whether reference longitude and/or latitude lines are to be plotted.
- Longitude Lines: Longitude lines start at the north pole and extend to the south pole. They are oriented exactly north/south. Expand this heading to select the longitude line color, style, and spacing. NOTE: The spacing must be evenly divisible into 360. Examples: 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 12, 24, etc.
- Latitude Lines: Latitude lines are parallel with the equator. Expand this heading to select the latitude line color, style, and spacing. The spacing must be evenly divisible into 360.
- Geographic Features: Expand this item to select which built-in reference features are to be included in the map. Options include coastlines, major islands, major rivers and lakes, country borders, and/or U.S. state boundaries. To activate an item, insert a check in its check-box and expand it to select line thickness (1 = thin, 3 = thick) and color.
- ! The features are low-resolution. The country boundaries are vintage 1990, and will not reflect more recent political boundary adjustments in eastern Europe, etc.
- Miscellaneous
- Centroid: This setting establishes the coordinate for the center of the sphere around which the point/polyline data items and reference items will plot.
Step-by-Step Summary
- Access the RockWorks Utilities program tab.
- Create a new datasheet and enter or import your listing the point coordinates to be plotted on the 3D spherical map.
Or, open one of the sample files and replace that data with your own. (In this example, the sample file = "\RockWorks17 Data\Samples\Sphereplot_Points_01.rwDat".) See the Global Map Point Data for details.
Longitude and latitude coordinates must be in decimal format. Additional data columns can include colors and radius measurements from earth center.
- Select the Utilities | Map | SpherePlot | 3D Projection - Points option.
- Establish the requested menu settings, described above.
- Click the Process button to continue.
The program will create an image that includes the requested points, labels, and/or available reference layers. The completed map will be displayed in a RockPlot3D tab in the options window.
- You can adjust any of the settings in the Options window (symbol options, annotations, etc.) and then click the Process button again to regenerate the 3D diagram.
! Each time you click the Process button, the existing display will be replaced.
- View / save / manipulate / export / print the map in the RockPlot3D window. (You can drill down to the individual components of the 3D view by expanding the Sphere group in the Data pane.)
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