500 likes | 656 Views
GIS Data Models. Vector Data Models Vector File Formats Raster Data Models Raster File Formats. Data Abstraction. To use GIS the real world must be abstracted into points, lines, polygons, raster cells, and attribute values
E N D
GIS Data Models Vector Data Models Vector File Formats Raster Data Models Raster File Formats
Data Abstraction • To use GIS the real world must be abstracted into points, lines, polygons, raster cells, and attribute values • Class examples may use common object that most people will understand. If you understand how to abstract common objects you will be able to apply the same method to object in your field
What is Vector Data • Vector Data uses Points and their (X,Y) coordinates to represent spatial features • Points, Lines and Polygons
Points • A point is a 0 dimensional object and has only the property of location (x,y) • Points can be used to Model features such as a well, building, power, pole, sample location ect. • Other name for a point are vertex, node, 0-cell
Lines • A line is a one-dimensional object that has the property of length • Lines can be used to represent road, streams, faults, dikes, maker beds, boundary, contacts etc. • Lines are also called an edge, link, chain, arc, 1-cell • In an ArcInfo coverage an arc starts with a node, has zero or more vertices, and ends with a node
Polygons • A polygon is a two-dimensional object with properties of area and perimeter • A polygon can represent a city, geologic formation, dike, lake, river, ect. • Other name for polygons face, zone 2-cell • Scale matters
Data Abstraction Discussion • If you do not understand this the rest of GIS will not make sense • Scale Matters • Intended use Matters
Examples • Trees • Dikes • Roads • Rivers
Topology • A set of rules on how objects relate to each other • Major difference in file formats • Higher level objects have special topology rules
Topology Definition • The Science of mathematics of relationships used to validate the geometry of vector entities, and for operations such as network tracing and tests of polygon adjacency. • The study of geometric properties that do not change when the forms are bent, stretched or under go similar geometric transformations.
Why Topology Matters • Error Detection open polygons unlabeled polygons slivers polygons that cannot exist next to each other • Network Modeling
Show Placitas • Arc Node Topology • Cover# • Lpoly# and Rpoly# • Tnode fnode • Label errors
Higher Level Object • Regions • Networks • TIN – Triangulated irregular network • Dynamic Segmentation
Regions Overlapping areas with different attributes Fire history Disconnected areas with the same attributes Hawaii
Networks • Road systems, power grids, water supply sewerage systems, drainage network • Continuous connected networks • Rules for displacement in a network • Attribute value accumulations due to displacements
TIN • Vector Surface Model • Triangulated Irregular Network • A set of nonoverlapping triangles each with a constant gradient • A TIN can honor original input elevations
Dynamic Segmentation • Combines a line coverage with a linear reference system • Has event tables for point events and linear events
Shape Files • Nontopological • Advantages no overhead to process topology • Disadvantages polygons are double digitized, no topologic data checking • 3 files .shp .shx .dbf
Coverages • Original ArcInfo Format • Directory With Several Files • Database Files are stored in the Info Directory • Uses Arc Node Topology • Planer Enforcement • Connectivity • Adjacency
GeoDatabase • New GIS Format at ArcGIS 8.0 • Three Types • Personal Geodatabase • Microsoft access 2000 database • File Geodatabase • XML based file • SDE GeoDatabase • Multi-user • Can connect to many RDBMS • Oracle, SQL server, Informix • File are stored in the format native to the RDBMS
GeoDatabase • Shapes are similar to shape files • Object-oriented model not a Geo-relational • There are 26 topology rules than can be used to relate different layers
Figure 3:1 Getting Started with Geographic Information Systems, Clarke (2003) p. 91
Grid Properties • Each Grid Cell holds one value even if it is empty. • A cell can hold an index standing for an attribute. • Cell resolution is given as its size on the ground. • Point and Lines move to the center of the cell. • Minimum line width is one cell. • Rasters are easy to read and write, and easy to draw on the screen.
Raster Pyramids • With out pyramids the entire raster must be read for each screen draw • Pyramids store reduced resolution dataset files .rrd to increase the speed of screen draws • When you add a raster to ArcMap if pyramids do not exist you can create them
Raster Resampling • Nearest Neighbor • Closest cell • Continuous and Discrete data • Bilinear interpolation • Average of nearest 4 cells • Continuous data only • Cubic Convolution • Average of nearest 16 cells • Continuous data only
Quad Tree Compression • May be use to get variable resolution for imagery in the National Map
What are Terrains? • New Dataset for ArcGIS 9.2 • They are a Multi-resolution, Tin-based surface. • Comprised of mesurements stored as features in a geodatabase. • Terrains live inside Feature Datasets, in a geodatabase.
What are Terrans? • Two Main characteristics of Terrrains: • Feature classes participate in a terrain • Rules are established to generate TIN pyramids on-th-fly. • They are designed to handle mass volumes of point data in a logical and efficient storage mechanism.
Figure 4.35 Geographic Information Systems and Introduction, Bernhardsen (2001), p. 87
C. Dana Tomlin, Geographic Information Systems and Cartographic Modeling (1990), P. 44 • “Yes raster is faster, but raster is vaster, and vector just seems more corrector”
Images are a form of raster data • ArcGIS can use many common image formats
Industry Standard Data Models • Some Industries have created standard data models • It is a good idea to use a standard model to promote sharing of data • Some data models can be very complex • Complex models require custom tools to be useful
References • Getting Started with Geographic Information Systems 4th Edition, Clark (2003) • Geographic Information Systems an Introduction 3rd Edition, Bernhardsen (2002) • Introduction to Geographic Information Systems 2nd Edition, Chang (2004) • GIS Fundamentals, Bolstad (2002) • ArcGIS 8.3 Desktop Help • Using GRID with ArcInfo version 7 ESRI