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3. Plane rectangular coordinate systems
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Rectangular coordinate systems
for national use, also called national grid systems,
are always based on a particular map projection.
A map projection
by itself isn't enough to define a national grid system. One
has to define e.g.:
A) the ellipsoid
/ geoïd
and
B) horizontal
datum,
C) the center of the projection,
D) the scale factor,
E) and the origin of the rectangular coordinate
system.
F) False
Easting and False Northing
G) Central Meridian ()
or the standard parallels
The above points A)
and B) are described
in seperate paragraphs on the following pages.
The most widely used grid system is
the so-called UTM system. UTM
stands for Universal Tranversal Mercator, this being the name
of the cartographic projection on which it is based. The UTM
system is designed to cover the whole world (excluding the
Artic and Antartic regions). It is a version of the Transverse
Mercator projection, see figure below.
The UTM grid too is a square kilometric grid.
To keep scale distortians in acceptable limits, the grid is "cut
up' into 60 zones with a width of 61 of longitude each, numbered
from 1-60 in a west-east direction starting from the international
date line (long. 1801) with zone 1.
Click here
for enlargement and original file (location / source).
X-values, in km, are measured in the northern hemisphere northward
from the equator, whose value again is 0 km; in the southern hemisphere
kilometric measurements are, again, northwards but so that the
equator is assigned the value of 10,000 km. Y-values are always
measured in a west-east direction: the central meridian of each
zone is assigned the value 500 km. This system ensures that there
can be no negative UTM values and there never is a need for +
or - signs, which is convenient.
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