The relationship of a distance on a map or model to the true distance in space; written as a ratio, such as 1:24,000.
| Cosmic Lexicon: Scale |
The relationship of a distance on a map or model to the true distance in space; written as a ratio, such as 1:24,000.
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| Wikipedia: Scale (map) |
The scale of a map is defined as the ratio of a distance on the map to the corresponding distance on the ground. If the region of the map is small enough for the curvature of the Earth to be neglected, then the scale may be taken as a constant ratio over the whole map. (A town plan would be an example). For maps covering larger areas, or the whole Earth, it is essential to use a map projection[1][2] from the sphere (or ellipsoid) to the plane. Such projections inevitably involve distortion and the scale can no longer be considered as constant. It is then necessary to introduce the concept of a variable point scale (or particular scale) which is defined as the ratio of the length of a small line element emanating from a point on the map to the length of the corresponding line element on the surface of the Earth. In general the point scale will vary with the position of the point and also the direction of the line element. Tissot's Indicatrix is often used to illustrate the variation of point scale. In the study of point scale it is convenient to define the projection formulae in such a way that the scale is unity, or nearly so, on some lines (or points) of the resulting map projection. Clearly such a map projection must be comparable to the size of the Earth and, in order to represent it on a small sheet of paper, it must be scaled down by a constant ratio known as the representative fraction (RF) or principal scale. Thus we have to differentiate two uses of the word scale: the variable point scale inherent in the projection and the constant scale involved in the reduction to the printed (or screen) map.
Map scales may be expressed in words (a lexical scale), as a ratio, or as a fraction. Examples are:
In addition to the above many maps carry one or more (graphical) bar scales. For example some British maps presently (2009) use three bar scales for kilometres, miles and nautical miles.
Lexical scales are to be deprecated whereas ratios and fractions are much more acceptable since they are immediately accessible in any language. Old maps may cause difficulties if they possess only a lexical scale in rare, old or even archaic units. For example a scale of one inch to a furlong is not too difficult to interpret in countries where Imperial units are, or were recently, in use. (It is 1/7920). A scale of one pouce to one league may be about 1/144,000 but it depends your choice of the many possible definitions for a league.
Scales are often qualified as small scale, typically for world maps or large regional maps, or large scale, typically for county maps or town plans. The usage of small as against large relates to the expressions as fractions. For example, a town plan may have a scale fraction of 1/10,000: this is much larger than a scale fraction 1/100,000,000 used for a world map. There is no hard and fast dividing line between small and large scales.
Their are two interpretations of scale statements. If a small area has been mapped neglecting the curvature of the Earth then the above scale statements may be taken as exact. On the other hand for high accuracy and/or large area coverage the curvature must be taken into account and the above scale statements must be reinterpreted as either nominal scales or a definition of the representative fraction. These distinctions are clarified below.
The region over which we can take the earth as sensibly flat depends on the accuracy of the survey measurements. If measured only to the nearest metre, then curvature is undetectable over a meridian distance of about 100 km and over an east-west line of about 80 km (at a latitude of 45 degrees). If surveyed to the nearest millimetre, then curvature is undetectable over a meridian distance of about 10 km and over an east-west line of about 8 km.[3] Thus a city plan of New York accurate to one metre or a building site plan accurate to one millimetre would both satisfy the above conditions for the neglect of curvature. They can be treated by plane surveying and mapped by scale drawings in which any two points at the same distance on the drawing are at the same distance on the ground. True ground distances are calculated by measuring the distance on the map and then multiplying by the inverse of the scale fraction or, equivalently, simply using dividers to transfer the separation between the points on the map to a bar scale on the map.
It is known that a sphere (or ellipsoid) cannot be projected to the plane without distortion (as illustrated by the impossibility of smoothing an orange peel onto a flat surface). More formally it follows from the Theorema Egregium of Gauss. The only true representation of a sphere at constant scale is another sphere such as the schoolroom globe. There is a limit to the practical size of such a globe and for detailed mapping we must use projections. The immediate corollary is that in any projection of the sphere to the plane the scale is variable: a constant separation on the the map does not correspond to a constant separation on the ground. Graphical bar scales may be present on the map but they must be used with caution for they will be accurate on only some lines of the map. (This is discussed further in the examples in the following sections.) A good atlas will usually discuss scale variation in its preface.
Let P be a point at latitude φ and longitude λ on the sphere (or ellipsoid). Let Q be a neighbouring point and let α be the angle between the element PQ and the meridian at P: this angle is the azimuth angle of the element PQ. Let P' and Q' be corresponding points on the projection. The angle between the direction P'Q' and the projection of the meridian is the bearing β. In general
. Comment: this precise distinction between azimuth (on the Earth's surface) and bearing (on the map) is not universally observed, many writers using the terms almost interchangeably.
Definition: the point scale at P is the ratio of the two distances P'Q' and PQ in the limit that Q approaches P. We write this as

where the notation indicates that the point scale is a function of the position of P and also the direction of the element PQ.
Definition: if P and Q lie on the same meridian (α = 0), the meridian scale is denoted by
.
Definition: if P and Q lie on the same parallel (α = π / 2), the parallel scale is denoted by
.
Definition: if the point scale depends only on position, not on direction, we say that it is isotropic and conventionally denote its value in any direction by the parallel scale factor k(λ,φ).
Definition: A map projection is said to be conformal if the angle between two lines intersecting at a point P is the same as the angle between the projected lines at the projected point P'. A conformal map has an isotropic scale factor. Conversely an isotropic scale factor implies a conformal projection.
Isotropy of scale implies that small elements are stretched equally in all directions, that is the shape of a small element is preserved. This is the property of orthomorphism (from Greek 'right shape'). The qualification 'small' means that at some given accuracy of measurement no change can be detected in the scale factor over the element. Since conformal projections have an isotropic scale factor they have also been called orthomorphic projections. For example the Mercator projection is conformal since it is constructed to preserve angles and its scale factor is isotopic, a function of latitude only: Mercator does preserve shape in small regions.
Definition: on a conformal projection with an isotropic scale, points which have the same scale value may be joined to form the isoscale lines. These are not plotted on maps for end users but they feature in many of the standard texts. (See Snyder[1] pages 203—206.)
There are two conventions used in setting down the equations of any given projection. For example, the equirectangular cylindrical projection may be written as
Here we shall adopt the first of these conventions (following the usage in the surveys by Snyder). Clearly the above projection equations define positions on a huge cylinder wrapped around the Earth and then unrolled. We say that these coordinates define the projection map which must be distinguished logically from the actual printed (or viewed) maps. If the definition of point scale in the previous section is in terms of the projection map then we can expect the scale factors to be close to unity. For normal tangent cylindrical projections the scale along the equator is k=1 and in general the scale changes as we move off the equator. Analysis of scale on the projection map is an investigation of the change of k away from its true value of unity.
Actual printed maps are produced from the projection map by a constant scaling denoted by a ratio such as 1:100M (for whole world maps) or 1:10000 (for such as town plans). To avoid confusion in the use of the word 'scale' this constant scale fraction is called the representative fraction (RF) of the printed map and it is to be identified with the ratio printed on the map. The actual printed map coordinates for the equirectangular cylindrical projection are
This convention allows a clear distinction of the intrinsic projection scaling and the reduction scaling.
From this point we ignore the RF and work with the projection map.
Consider a small circle on the the surface of the Earth centred at a point P at latitude φ and longitude λ. Since the point scale varies with position and direction the projection of the circle on the projection will be distorted. Tissot proved that, as long as the distortion is not too great, the circle will become an ellipse on the projection. In general the dimension, shape and orientation of the ellipse will change over the projection. Superimposing these distortion ellipses on the map projection conveys the way in which the point scale is changing over the map. The distortion ellipse is known as Tissot's Indicatrix. The example shown here is the Winkel tripel projection, the standard projection for world maps made by the National Geographic Society. The minimum distortion is on the central meridian at latitudes of 30 degrees (North and South). (Other examples [4][5]).
The key to a quantitative understanding of scale is to consider an infinitesimal element on the sphere. The figure shows a point P at latitude φ and longitude λ on the sphere. The point Q is at latitude φ + δφ and longitude λ + δλ. The lines PK and MQ are arcs of meridians of length aδφ where a is the radius of the sphere and φ is in radian measure. The lines PM and KQ are arcs of parallel circles of length (acosφ)δλ withλ in radian measure. In deriving a point property of the projection at P it suffices to take an infinitesimal element PMQK of the surface: in the limit of Q approaching P such an element tends to an infinitesimally small planar rectangle.
Normal cylindrical projections of the sphere have x = aλ and y a function of latitude only. Therefore the infinitesimal element PMQK on the sphere projects to an infinitesimal element P'M'Q'K' which is an exact rectangle with a base δx = aδλ and height δy. By comparing the elements on sphere and projection we can immediately deduce expressions for the scale factors on parallels and meridians. (We defer the treatment of the scale in a general direction to a mathematical addendum to this page.)


Note that the parallel scale factor k = secφ is independent of the definition of y(φ) so it is the same for all normal cylindrical projections. It is useful to note that





The following examples illustrate three normal cylindrical projections and in each case the variation of scale with position and direction is illustrated by the use of Tissot's Indicatrix.
The equirectangular projection[1][2][3], also known as the Plate Carrée (french for "flat square") or (somewhat misleadingly) the equidistant projection, is defined by
where a is the radius of the sphere, λ is the longitude from the central meridian of the projection (here taken as the Greenwich meridian at λ = 0) and φ is the latitude. Note that λ and φ are in radians (obtained by multiplying the degree measure by a factor of π/180). The longitude λ is in the range [ − π,π] and the latitude φ is in the range [ − π / 2,π / 2].
Since y'(φ) = 1 the previous section gives
meridian scale 
For the calculation of the point scale in an arbitrary direction see addendum.
The figure illustrates the Tissot indicatrix for this projection. On the equator h=k=1 and the circular elements are undistorted on projection. At higher latitudes the circles are distorted into an ellipse given by stretching in the parallel direction only: there is no distortion in the meridian direction. The ratio of the major axis to the minor axis is secφ. Clearly the area of the ellipse increases by the same factor.
It is instructive to consider the use of bar scales that might appear on a printed version of this projection. The scale is true (k=1) on the equator so that multiplying its length on a printed map by the inverse of the RF (or principal scale) gives the actual circumference of the Earth. The bar scale on the map is also drawn at the true scale so that transferring a separation between two points on the equator to the bar scale will give the correct distance between those points. The same is true on the meridians. On a parallel other than the equator the scale is secφ so when we transfer a separation from a parallel to the bar scale we must divide the bar scale distance by this factor to obtain the distance between the points when measured along the parallel (which is not the true distance along a great circle). On a line at a bearing of say 45 degrees (
) the scale is continuously varying with latitude and transferring a separation along the line to the bar scale does not give a distance related to the true distance in any simple way. (But see addendum). Even if we could work out a distance along the this line of constant bearing its relevance is questionable since such a line on the projection corresponds to a complicated curve on the sphere. For these reasons bar scales on small scale maps must be used with extreme caution.
The Mercator projection maps the sphere to a rectangle (of infinite extent in the y-direction) by the equations[1][2][3]

where a,
and
are as in the previous example. Since y'(φ) = asecφ the scale factors are:


In the mathematical addendum below we prove that the point scale in an arbitrary direction is also equal to secφ so the scale is isotropic (same in all directions), its magnitude increasing with latitude as secφ. In the Tissot diagram each infinitesimal circular element preserves its shape but is enlarged more and more as the latitude increases.
Lambert's equal area projection maps the sphere to a finite rectangle by the equations[1][2][3]

where a, λ and φ are as in the previous example. Since y'(φ) = cosφ the scale factors are


The calculation of the point scale in an arbitrary direction is given below.
The vertical and horizontal scales now compensate each other (hk=1) and in the Tissot diagram each infinitesimal circular element is distorted into an ellipse of the same area as the undistorted circles on the equator.
The Mercator point scale is unity on the equator but varies with latitude as k = secφ. Since secφ tends to infinity as we approach the poles the Mercator map is grossly distorted at high latitudes and for this reason the projection is totally inappropriate for world maps (unless we are discussing navigation and rhumb lines). However, at a latitude of about 25 degrees the value of secφ is about 1.1 so Mercator is accurate to within 10% in a strip of width 50 degrees centred on the equator. Narrower strips are better: a strip of width 16 degrees (centred on the equator) is accurate to within 1% or 1 part in 100.
A standard criterion for good large scale maps is that the accuracy should be within 4 parts in 10,000, or 0.04%, corresponding to k = 1.0004. Since secφ attains this value at φ = 1.62 degrees the Mercator projection is highly accurate within a strip of width 3.24 degrees centred on the equator. This corresponds to north-south distance of about 360 km or 200 miles. Within this strip Mercator is very good, highly accurate and shape preserving because it is conformal (angle preserving). These observations prompted the development of the transverse Mercator projections in which a meridian is treated 'like an equator' of the projection so that we obtain an accurate map within a narrow distance of that meridian. Such maps are good for countries aligned nearly north-south (like Great Britain and a set of 60 such maps is used for the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM). Note that in both these projections (which are based on various ellipsoids) the transformation equations for x and y and the expression for the scale factor are complicated functions of both latitude and longitude.
The demand that the scale satisfies 1 < k < 1.0004 may be relaxed a little to 0.9996 < k < 1.0004. We still have a scale variation that is within 0.04% of true scale so the mapping is still highly accurate. As an example consider a secant Mercator projection with

The numeric multipliers do not alter the shape of the projection but it does mean that the scale factors are modified:

Thus
Such narrow zones of high accuracy are used in both the UTM and the British OSGB projection. In both the cases the scale on the central meridian is constant at k0 = 0.9996 and the isoscales lines with k = 1 are slightly curved lines approximately 180 km east and west of the central meridian. The maximum value of the scale factor is 1.001 for UTM and 1.0007 for OSGB.
The lines of unit scale at latitude φ1 (north and south), where the cylindrical projection surface intersects the sphere, are the standard parallels of the secant projection. Whilst a narrow band with | k − 1 | < 0.0004 is important for high accuracy mapping at a large scale for world maps much wider spaced standard parallels are used to control the scale variation. Examples are
For normal cylindrical projections the geometry of the infinitesimal elements gives


The relationship between the angles
and
is

For the Mercator projection y'(φ) = asecφ giving α = β: angles are preserved. (Hardly surprising since this is the relation used to derive Mercator). For the equidistant and Lambert projections we have
and
respectively so the relationship between
and
depends upon the latitude φ. Denote the point scale at P when the infinitesimal element PQ makes an angle
with the meridian by μα. It is given by the ratio of distances:

Substituting
and
and
from equations (a) and (b) repectively gives
![\mu_\alpha(\phi) = \sec\phi \left[\frac{\sin\alpha}{\sin\beta}\right].](http://wpcontent.answers.com/math/b/b/3/bb3778d9000d31c2a7a1d022d4f3cdfe.png)
For the projections other than Mercator we must first calculate β from α and φ using equation (c), before we can find μα. For example the equirectangular projection has y' = a so that

If we consider a line of constant slope β on the projection both the corresponding value of α and the scale factor along the line are complicated functions of φ. There is no simple way of transferring a general finite separation to a bar scale and obtaining meaningful results.
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