The Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) is a map projection system for assigning coordinates to locations on the surface of the Earth. Like the traditional method of latitude and longitude, it is a horizontal position representation, which means it ignores altitude and treats the earth surface as a perfect ellipsoid. However, it differs from global latitude/longitude in that it divides earth into 60 zones and projects each to the plane as a basis for its coordinates. Specifying a location means specifying the zone and the x, y coordinate in that plane. The projection from spheroid to a UTM zone is some parameterization of the transverse Mercator projection. The parameters vary by nation or region or mapping system.
Most zones in UTM span 6 degrees of longitude, and each has a designated central meridian. The scale factor at the central meridian is specified to be 0.9996 of true scale for most UTM systems in use.[1] [2]
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) website states that the system was developed by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, starting in the early 1940s.[3] However, a series of aerial photos found in the Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv (the military section of the German Federal Archives) apparently dating from 1943–1944 bear the inscription UTMREF followed by grid letters and digits, and projected according to the transverse Mercator,[4] a finding that would indicate that something called the UTM Reference system was developed in the 1942–43 time frame by the Wehrmacht. It was probably carried out by the Abteilung für Luftbildwesen (Department for Aerial Photography). From 1947 onward the US Army employed a very similar system, but with the now-standard 0.9996 scale factor at the central meridian as opposed to the German 1.0. For areas within the contiguous United States the Clarke Ellipsoid of 1866[5] was used. For the remaining areas of Earth, including Hawaii, the International Ellipsoid[6] was used. The World Geodetic System WGS84 ellipsoid is now generally used to model the Earth in the UTM coordinate system, which means current UTM northing at a given point can differ up to 200 meters from the old. For different geographic regions, other datum systems can be used.
Prior to the development of the Universal Transverse Mercator coordinate system, several European nations demonstrated the utility of grid-based conformal maps by mapping their territory during the interwar period. Calculating the distance between two points on these maps could be performed more easily in the field (using the Pythagorean theorem) than was possible using the trigonometric formulas required under the graticule-based system of latitude and longitude. In the post-war years, these concepts were extended into the Universal Transverse Mercator/Universal Polar Stereographic (UTM/UPS) coordinate system, which is a global (or universal) system of grid-based maps.
The transverse Mercator projection is a variant of the Mercator projection, which was originally developed by the Flemish geographer and cartographer Gerardus Mercator, in 1570. This projection is conformal, which means it preserves angles and therefore shapes across small regions. However, it distorts distance and area.
The UTM system divides the Earth into 60 zones, each 6° of longitude in width. Zone 1 covers longitude 180° to 174° W; zone numbering increases eastward to zone 60, which covers longitude 174°E to 180°. The polar regions south of 80°S and north of 84°N are excluded.
Each of the 60 zones uses a transverse Mercator projection that can map a region of large north-south extent with low distortion. By using narrow zones of 6° of longitude (up to 668 km) in width, and reducing the scale factor along the central meridian to 0.9996 (a reduction of 1:2500), the amount of distortion is held below 1 part in 1,000 inside each zone. Distortion of scale increases to 1.0010 at the zone boundaries along the equator.
In each zone the scale factor of the central meridian reduces the diameter of the transverse cylinder to produce a secant projection with two standard lines, or lines of true scale, about 180 km on each side of, and about parallel to, the central meridian (Arc cos 0.9996 = 1.62° at the Equator). The scale is less than 1 inside the standard lines and greater than 1 outside them, but the overall distortion is minimized.
The UTM zones are uniform across the globe, except in two areas. On the southwest coast of Norway, zone 32 is extended 3° further west, and zone 31 is correspondingly shrunk to cover only open water. Also, in the region around Svalbard, the zones 32, 34 and 36 are not used, while zones 31 (9° wide), 33 (12° wide), 35 (12° wide), and 37 (9° wide) are extended to cover the gaps.
Distortion of scale increases in each UTM zone as the boundaries between the UTM zones are approached. However, it is often convenient or necessary to measure a series of locations on a single grid when some are located in two adjacent zones. Around the boundaries of large scale maps (1:100,000 or larger) coordinates for both adjoining UTM zones are usually printed within a minimum distance of 40 km on either side of a zone boundary. Ideally, the coordinates of each position should be measured on the grid for the zone in which they are located, but because the scale factor is still relatively small near zone boundaries, it is possible to overlap measurements into an adjoining zone for some distance when necessary.
Latitude bands are not a part of UTM,[7] but rather a part of the military grid reference system (MGRS).[8] They are however sometimes included in UTM notation. Including latitude bands in UTM notation can lead to ambiguous coordinates—as the letter "S" either refers to the southern hemisphere or a latitude band in the northern hemisphere—and should therefore be avoided.
A position on the Earth is given by the UTM zone number and hemisphere designator and the easting and northing planar coordinate pair in that zone.
The point of origin of each UTM zone is the intersection of the equator and the zone's central meridian. To avoid dealing with negative numbers, a false Easting of meters is added to the central meridian. Thus a point that has an easting of meters is about 100 km west of the central meridian. For most such points, the true distance would be slightly more than 100 km as measured on the surface of the Earth because of the distortion of the projection. UTM eastings range from about meters to meters at the equator.
In the northern hemisphere positions are measured northward from zero at the equator. The maximum "northing" value is about meters at latitude 84 degrees North, the north end of the UTM zones. The southern hemisphere's northing at the equator is set at meters. Northings decrease southward from these meters to about meters at 80 degrees South, the south end of the UTM zones. Therefore, no point has a negative northing value.
For example, the CN Tower is at 43.6426°N -79.3871°W, which is in UTM zone 17, and the grid position is east, north. Two points in Zone 17 have these coordinates, one in the northern hemisphere and one in the south; the non-ambiguous format is to specify the full zone and hemisphere designator, that is, "17N 630084 4833438".
These formulae are truncated version of, which were originally derived by Johann Heinrich Louis Krüger in 1912.[9] They are accurate to around a millimeter within of the central meridian.[10] Concise commentaries for their derivation have also been given.[11] [12]
The WGS 84 spatial reference system describes Earth as an oblate spheroid along north-south axis with an equatorial radius of
a=6378.137
1/f=298.257223563
\varphi
λ
k
\gamma
λ0
N0=0
N0=10000
k0=0.9996
E0=500
In the following formulas, the distances are in kilometers. First, here are some preliminary values:
\begin{align} n&=
f | |
2-f |
,&A&=
a | |
1+n |
\left(1+
n2 | + | |
4 |
n4 | |
64 |
+ … \right),\ {} \end{align}
\begin{align} \alpha1&=
1 | n- | |
2 |
2 | |
3 |
| ||||
n |
n3,&\alpha2&=
13 | |
48 |
| ||||
n |
n3,&\alpha3&=
61 | |
240 |
n3,\\[12pt] \beta1&=
1 | n- | |
2 |
2 | |
3 |
| ||||
n |
n3,&\beta2&=
1 | |
48 |
| ||||
n |
n3,&\beta3&=
17 | |
480 |
n3,\\[12pt] \delta1&=2n-
2 | |
3 |
n2-2n3,&\delta2&=
7 | |
3 |
| ||||
n |
n3,&\delta3&=
56 | |
15 |
n3. \end{align}
First we compute some intermediate values:
t=\sinh\left(\tanh-1\left(\sin\varphi\right)-
2\sqrtn | |
1+n |
\tanh-1\left(
2\sqrtn | |
1+n |
\sin\varphi\right)\right),
\xi'=\tan-1\left(
t | |
\cos(λ-λ0) |
\right),η'=\tanh-1\left(
\sin(λ-λ0) | |
\sqrt{1+t2 |
3 | |
\sigma=1+\sum | |
j=1 |
2j\alphaj\cos(2j\xi')\cosh(2jη'),\tau=\sum
3 | |
j=1 |
2j\alphaj\sin(2j\xi')\sinh(2jη').
The final formulae are:
E=E0+k0
3 | |
A\left(η'+\sum | |
j=1 |
\alphaj\cos(2j\xi')\sinh(2jη')\right),
N=N0+k0
3 | |
A\left(\xi'+\sum | |
j=1 |
\alphaj\sin(2j\xi')\cosh(2jη')\right),
k= | k0A | \sqrt{\left\{1+\left( |
a |
1-n | |
1+n |
\tan\varphi\right)2\right\}
\sigma2+\tau2 | ||||||||||||
|
\gamma=\tan-1\left(
\tau\sqrt{1+t2 | |
+\sigma |
2}-\tau | |
t\tan(λ-λ | |
0)}{\sigma\sqrt{1+t |
t\tan(λ-λ0)}\right).
where
E
N
k
\gamma
Note: Hemi = +1 for Northern, Hemi = −1 for Southern
First let's compute some intermediate values:
\xi= | N-N0 | ,η= |
k0A |
E-E0 | |
k0A |
,
3 | |
\xi'=\xi-\sum | |
j=1 |
\betaj\sin\left(2j\xi\right)\cosh\left(2jη\right),
3 | |
η'=η-\sum | |
j=1 |
\betaj\cos\left(2j\xi\right)\sinh\left(2jη\right),
3 | |
\sigma'=1-\sum | |
j=1 |
2j\betaj\cos\left(2j\xi\right)\cosh\left(2jη\right),
3 | |
\tau'=\sum | |
j=1 |
2j\betaj\sin\left(2j\xi\right)\sinh\left(2jη\right),
\chi=\sin-1\left(
\sin\xi' | |
\coshη' |
\right).
The final formulae are:
3 | |
\varphi=\chi+\sum | |
j=1 |
\deltaj\sin\left(2j\chi\right),
λ0=Zone x 6\circ-183\circ
λ=λ0+\tan-1\left(
\sinhη' | |
\cos\xi' |
\right),
k= | k0A | \sqrt{\left\{1+\left( |
a |
1-n | |
1+n |
| ||||
\tan\varphi\right) |
\gamma=Hemi x \tan-1\left(
\tau'+\sigma'\tan\xi'\tanhη' | |
\sigma'-\tau'\tan\xi'\tanhη' |
\right).