GEOIDEVAL(1) | GeographicLib Utilities | GEOIDEVAL(1) |
GeoidEval -- look up geoid heights
GeoidEval [ -n name ] [ -d dir ] [ -l ] [ -a | -c south west north east ] [ -w ] [ -z zone ] [ --msltohae ] [ --haetomsl ] [ -v ] [ --comment-delimiter commentdelim ] [ --version | -h | --help ] [ --input-file infile | --input-string instring ] [ --line-separator linesep ] [ --output-file outfile ]
GeoidEval reads in positions on standard input and prints out the corresponding heights of the geoid model above the WGS84 ellipsoid on standard output.
Positions are given as latitude and longitude, UTM/UPS, or MGRS, in any of the formats accepted by GeoConvert(1). (MGRS coordinates signify the center of the corresponding MGRS square.) If the -z option is specified then the specified zone is prepended to each line of input (which must be in UTM/UPS coordinates). This allows a file with UTM eastings and northings in a single zone to be used as standard input.
More accurate results for the geoid height are provided by Gravity(1). This utility can also compute the direction of gravity accurately.
The height of the geoid above the ellipsoid, N, is sometimes called the geoid undulation. It can be used to convert a height above the ellipsoid, h, to the corresponding height above the geoid (the orthometric height, roughly the height above mean sea level), H, using the relations
GeoidEval computes geoid heights by interpolating on the data in a regularly spaced table (see "INTERPOLATION"). The following geoid grids are available (however, some may not be installed):
bilinear error cubic error name geoid grid max rms max rms egm84-30 EGM84 30' 1.546 m 70 mm 0.274 m 14 mm egm84-15 EGM84 15' 0.413 m 18 mm 0.021 m 1.2 mm egm96-15 EGM96 15' 1.152 m 40 mm 0.169 m 7.0 mm egm96-5 EGM96 5' 0.140 m 4.6 mm .0032 m 0.7 mm egm2008-5 EGM2008 5' 0.478 m 12 mm 0.294 m 4.5 mm egm2008-2_5 EGM2008 2.5' 0.135 m 3.2 mm 0.031 m 0.8 mm egm2008-1 EGM2008 1' 0.025 m 0.8 mm .0022 m 0.7 mm
By default, the "egm96-5" geoid model is used. This may changed by setting the environment variable "GEOGRAPHICLIB_GEOID_NAME" or with the -n option. The errors listed here are estimates of the quantization and interpolation errors in the reported heights compared to the specified geoid.
The geoid model data will be loaded from a directory specified at compile time. This may changed by setting the environment variables "GEOGRAPHICLIB_GEOID_PATH" or "GEOGRAPHICLIB_DATA", or with the -d option. The -h option prints the default geoid path and name. Use the -v option to ascertain the full path name of the data file.
Instructions for downloading and installing geoid data are available at <https://geographiclib.sourceforge.io/C++/doc/geoid.html#geoidinst>.
NOTE: all the geoids above apply to the WGS84 ellipsoid (a = 6378137 m, f = 1/298.257223563) only.
Cubic interpolation is used to compute the geoid height unless -l is specified in which case bilinear interpolation is used. The cubic interpolation is based on a least-squares fit of a cubic polynomial to a 12-point stencil
. 1 1 . 1 2 2 1 1 2 2 1 . 1 1 .
The cubic is constrained to be independent of longitude when evaluating the height at one of the poles. Cubic interpolation is considerably more accurate than bilinear; however it results in small discontinuities in the returned height on cell boundaries.
By default, the data file is randomly read to compute the geoid heights at the input positions. Usually this is sufficient for interactive use. If many heights are to be computed, use -c south west north east to notify GeoidEval to read a rectangle of data into memory; heights within the this rectangle can then be computed without any disk access. If -a is specified all the geoid data is read; in the case of "egm2008-1", this requires about 0.5 GB of RAM. The evaluation of heights outside the cached area causes the necessary data to be read from disk. Use the -v option to verify the size of the cache.
Regardless of whether any cache is requested (with the -a or -c options), the data for the last grid cell in cached. This allows the geoid height along a continuous path to be returned with little disk overhead.
An illegal line of input will print an error message to standard output beginning with "ERROR:" and causes GeoidEval to return an exit code of 1. However, an error does not cause GeoidEval to terminate; following lines will be converted.
The geoid is usually approximated by an "earth gravity model". The models published by the NGA are:
The height of the EGM96 geoid at Timbuktu
echo 16:46:33N 3:00:34W | GeoidEval => 28.7068 -0.02e-6 -1.73e-6
The first number returned is the height of the geoid and the 2nd and 3rd are its slopes in the northerly and easterly directions.
Convert a point in UTM zone 18n from MSL to HAE
echo 531595 4468135 23 | GeoidEval --msltohae -z 18n => 531595 4468135 -10.842
GeoConvert(1), Gravity(1), geographiclib-get-geoids(8).
An online version of this utility is availbable at <https://geographiclib.sourceforge.io/cgi-bin/GeoidEval>.
GeoidEval was written by Charles Karney.
GeoidEval was added to GeographicLib, <https://geographiclib.sourceforge.io>, in 2009-09.
2022-06-09 | GeographicLib 2.1.2 |