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Example BGMAP1.in: | Example BGMAP1.in (for maplets with a GSD of 10cm and a 33% overlap): |
Basic Tiling - Achieving the Desired Maplet Overlap
(compiled by DL)
Purpose: Basic tiling allows the user to generate a suite of maplets at a higher resolution which tile a region of interest. The overlap of the new maplets is controlled by the ratio of maplet ground sample distance (GSD) to bigmap scale. This 'How-To' explains how the user achieves the desired maplet overlap percentage.
Generating a Tiling Bigmap
The user must generate a bigmap which covers the region of interest and whose parameters are set up such that the new maplets will overlap by the desired amount.
Bigmap .in File
The user must adjust the bigmap pixel scale in the tiling .in file in order to achieve the desired maplet overlap ratio. This is done by applying a multiplicative factor to the maplet ground sample distance (GSD) as follows:
maplet GSD = 10cm
bigmap scale = 10cm * 1.5 = 15cm to achieve a 25% overlap
Example set of multiplicative factors:
Multiplicative Factor |
Maplet Overlap |
Example for Maplet GSD = 10cm |
0.8 |
58% |
bigmap scale = 10cm * 0.8 = 8cm |
1.0 |
50% |
bigmap scale = 10cm * 1.0 = 10cm |
1.3 |
33% |
bigmap scale = 10cm * 1.3 = 13cm |
1.5 |
25% |
bigmap scale = 10cm * 1.5 = 15cm |
2.0 |
0 |
bigmap scale = 10cm * 2.0 = 20cm |
Example BGMAP1.in (for maplets with a GSD of 10cm and a 33% overlap):
m <- To locate, reference to a map START1 <- Reference map name 49 49 <- Reference map pixel/line location 0.00013 130 1.23400 1000 <- scale (km/pixel), Q size, integer random seed, maximum maplet scale BGMAP1 <- bigmap name 1 <- bigmap program commands .005 .025 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0