Jordan Transverse Mercator
Geodesy |
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Jordan Transverse Mercator (JTM) (Arabic: نظام تربيع ميركاتور الأردني المستعرض) is a grid system created by the Royal Jordan Geographic Center (RJGC). This system is based on 6° belts with a Central Meridian of 37° East and a Scale Factor at Origin (mo) = 0.9998. The JTM is based on the Hayford ellipsoid adopted by the IUGG in 1924. No transformation parameters are presently offered by the government.[1] However, Prof. Stephen H. Savage of Arizona State University provides the following parameters for the projection:
Jordan Transverse Mercator Geographic Coordinate System: GCS_International_1924 Datum: D:International_1924 Spheroid: International_1924
Axis: 6378388 Flattening: 297
Prime Meridian: Greenwich
Prime Meridian Longitude: 0
Units: Degree
Unit Scale Factor: 0.017453292519943295
Projection: Transverse Mercator
False Easting: 500,000 False Northing: -3,000,000 Central Meridian: 37 Scale Factor: 0.9998 Central Parallel: 0
Units: Meter
Scale Factor 1
Three-parameter transformation to WGS84 is:
ΔX = –86 meters ΔY = –98 meters ΔZ = –119 meters
Prof. Savage also offers software, ReprojectME!, which will convert coordinates between JTM and other systems. (See http://daahl.ucsd.edu/gaialab/# for more information.)
The central meridian of 37° East is roughly midway between the extremes of Jordan: the Karameh Border Crossing with Iraq is close to 39° East, while the city of Aqaba on the Red Sea is close to 35° East.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Grids & Datums—Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan Article by Clifford J. Mugnier, C.P., C.M.S. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-12-14. Retrieved 2007-02-23.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
External links
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