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Try this:
http://www.teacherschoice.com.au/Mat...conversion.htm "David" wrote: I am trying to generate a circular radar or XY scatter point plot using geographical coordinates referenced to a tower in the aproximate center (with its own geographical coordinates and the plotted data in 4 quadrants (+X/+Y, -X/+Y, -X/-Y and +X/-Y) in order to plot the RF field strength of an FM broadcast station. I have 5 columns of data: 1 the Latitude coordinates of the tower for center reference. 2 the Longitude coordinates of the tower for center reference. 3 the Latitude coordinates where I took the measurements. 4 the Longitude coordinates where I took the measurements. 5 The RF field strength at the aforementioned coordinates . I would really appreciate any help with this as it has been quite a few decades since I have tried Cartisian Co-ordinates, or rectangular to polar conversions and such. What's left of my brain is starting to get foggy!!! Dave Whitehead |
I am not sure you need to convert between polar and cartesian
coordinates. When looking at latitude and longitude lines over a small enough region, the lines will form a rectangular grid. [It is only when looking at a large enough region of the earth that the convergence of the longitude lines becomes apparent.] So, if the region of interest is sufficiently small, all you need to do is subtract each latitude (y) and longitude (x) from the tower's lat/long readings. Now, plot these relative x,y readings and you will have a map of the various positions where you took the readings with the tower being at the center at (0,0). Use Bovey's XY Chartlabeler (www.appspro.com) or Walkenbach's Chart Tools (www.j-walk.com) to add the RF field strength as a data label for each plotted point. -- Regards, Tushar Mehta www.tushar-mehta.com Excel, PowerPoint, and VBA add-ins, tutorials Custom MS Office productivity solutions In article , dlw0 @sbcglobal.net says... I am trying to generate a circular radar or XY scatter point plot using geographical coordinates referenced to a tower in the aproximate center (with its own geographical coordinates and the plotted data in 4 quadrants (+X/+Y, -X/+Y, -X/-Y and +X/-Y) in order to plot the RF field strength of an FM broadcast station. I have 5 columns of data: 1 the Latitude coordinates of the tower for center reference. 2 the Longitude coordinates of the tower for center reference. 3 the Latitude coordinates where I took the measurements. 4 the Longitude coordinates where I took the measurements. 5 The RF field strength at the aforementioned coordinates . I would really appreciate any help with this as it has been quite a few decades since I have tried Cartisian Co-ordinates, or rectangular to polar conversions and such. What's left of my brain is starting to get foggy!!! Dave Whitehead |
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