问题
I've been looking for a solution to convert cartesian coordinates (lat, long) that I have to polar coordinates in order to facilitate a simulation that I want to run, but I haven't found any questions or answers here for doing this in R. There are a number of options, including the built in function cart2pol in Matlab, but all of my data are in R and I'd like to continue getting comfortable working in this framework.
Question:
I have lat/long coordinates from tagging data, and I want to convert these to polar coordinates (meaning jump size and angle: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polar_coordinate_system) so that I can then shuffle or bootstrap them (haven't decided which) about 1,000 times, and calculate the straight-line distance of each simulated track from the starting point. I have a true track, and I'm interested in determining if this animal is exhibiting site affinity by simulating 1,000 random tracks with the same jump sizes and turning angles, but in completely different orders and combinations. So I need 1,000 straight-line distances from the origin to create a distribution of distances and then compare this to my true data set's straight-line distance.
I'm comfortable doing the bootstrapping, but I'm stuck at the very first step, which is converting my cartesian lat/long coordinates to polar coordinates (jump size and turning angle). I know there are built in functions to do this in other programs such as Matlab, but I can't find any way to do it in R. I could do it manually by hand in a for-loop, but if there's a package out there or any easier way to do it, I'd much prefer that.
Ideally I'd like to convert the data to polar coordinates, run the simulation, and then for each random track output an end point as cartesian coordinates, lat/long, so I can then calculate the straight-line distance traveled.
I didn't post any sample data, as it would just be a two-column data frame of lat and long coordinates.
Thanks for any help you can provide! If there's an easy explanation somewhere on this site or others that I missed, please point me in that direction! I couldn't find anything.
Cheers
回答1:
For x-y coordinates that are in the same units (e.g. meters rather than degrees of latitude and degrees of longitude), you can use this function to get a data.frame of jump sizes and turning angles (in degrees).
getSteps <- function(x,y) {
d <- diff(complex(real = x, imaginary = y))
data.frame(size = Mod(d),
angle = c(NA, diff(Arg(d)) %% (2*pi)) * 360/(2*pi))
}
## Try it out
set.seed(1)
x <- rnorm(10)
y <- rnorm(10)
getSteps(x, y)
# size angle
# 1 1.3838360 NA
# 2 1.4356900 278.93771
# 3 2.9066189 101.98625
# 4 3.5714584 144.00231
# 5 1.6404354 114.73369
# 6 1.3082132 135.76778
# 7 0.9922699 74.09479
# 8 0.2036045 141.67541
# 9 0.9100189 337.43632
## A plot helps check that this works
plot(x, y, type = "n", asp = 1)
text(x, y, labels = 1:10)
回答2:
Since it is fairly straight forward, you can write your own function. Matlab-like cart2pol
function in R:
cart2pol <- function(x, y)
{
r <- sqrt(x^2 + y^2)
t <- atan(y/x)
c(r,t)
}
回答3:
I used Josh O'Brien's code and got what appear to be reasonable jumps and angles—they match up pretty well to eyeballing the rough distance and heading between points. I then used a formula from his suggestions to create a function to turn the polar coordinates back to cartesian coordinates, and a for loop to apply the function to the data frame of all of the polar coordinates. The loops appear to work, and the outputs are in the correct units, but I don't believe the values that it's outputting are corresponding to my data. So either I did a miscalculation with my formula, or there's something else going on. More details below:
Here's the head of my lat long data:
> head(Tag1SSM[,3:4])
lon lat
1 130.7940 -2.647957
2 130.7873 -2.602994
3 130.7697 -2.565903
4 130.7579 -2.520757
5 130.6911 -2.704841
6 130.7301 -2.752182
When I plot the full dataset just as values, I get this plot:
which looks exactly the same as if I were to plot this using any spatial or mapping package in R.
I then used Josh's function to convert my data to polar coordinates:
x<-Tag1SSM$lon
y<-Tag1SSM$lat
getSteps <- function(x,y) {
d <- diff(complex(real = x, imaginary = y))
data.frame(size = Mod(d),
angle = c(NA, diff(Arg(d)) %% (2*pi)) * 360/(2*pi))
}
which produced the following polar coordinates appropriately:
> polcoords<-getSteps(x,y)
> head(polcoords)
size angle
1 0.04545627 NA
2 0.04103718 16.88852
3 0.04667590 349.38153
4 0.19581350 145.35439
5 0.06130271 59.37629
6 0.01619242 31.86359
Again, these look right to me, and correspond well to the actual angles and relative distances between points. So far so good.
Now I want to convert these back to cartesian coordinates and calculate a euclidian distance from the origin. These don't have to be in true lat/long, as I'm just comparing them amongst themselves. So I'm happy for the origin to be set as (0,0) and for distances to be calculated in reference x,y values instead of kilometers or something like that.
So, I used this function with Josh's help and a bit of web searching:
polar2cart<-function(x,y,size,angle){
#convert degrees to radians (dividing by 360/2*pi, or multiplying by pi/180)
angle=angle*pi/180
if(is.na(x)) {x=0} #this is for the purpose of the for loop below
if(is.na(y)) {y=0}
newx<-x+size*sin(angle) ##X #this is how you convert back to cartesian coordinates
newy<-y+size*cos(angle) ##Y
return(c("x"=newx,"y"=newy)) #output the new x and y coordinates
}
And then plugged it into this for loop:
u<-polcoords$size
v<-polcoords$angle
n<-162 #I want 162 new coordinates, starting from 0
N<-cbind(rep(NA,163),rep(NA,163)) #need to make 163 rows, though, for i+1 command below— first row will be NA
for(i in 1:n){
jump<-polar2cart(N[i,1],N[i,2],u[i+1],v[i+1]) #use polar2cart function above, jump from previous coordinate in N vector
N[i+1,1]<-jump[1] #N[1,] will be NA's which sets the starting point to 0,0—new coords are then calculated from each previous N entry
N[i+1,2]<-jump[2]
Dist<-sqrt((N[163,1]^2)+(N[163,2]^2))
}
And then I can take a look at N, with my new coordinates based on those jumps:
> N
[,1] [,2]
[1,] NA NA
[2,] 0.011921732 0.03926732
[3,] 0.003320851 0.08514394
[4,] 0.114640605 -0.07594871
[5,] 0.167393509 -0.04472125
[6,] 0.175941466 -0.03096891
This is where the problem is... the x,y coordinates from N get progressively larger—there's a bit of variation in there, but if you scroll down the list, y goes from 0.39 to 11.133, with very few backward steps to lower values. This isn't what my lat/long data do, and if I calculated the cart->pol and pol->cart properly, these new values from N should match my lat/long data, just in a different coordinate system. This is what the N values look like plotted:
Not the same at all... The last point in N is the farthest point from the origin, while in my lat/long data, the last point is actually quite close to the first point, and definitely not the farthest point away. I think the issue must be in my conversion from polar coordinates back to cartesian coordinates, but I'm not sure how to fix it...
Any help in solving this would be much appreciated!
Cheers
回答4:
I think this code I wrote converts to polar coordinates:
# example data
x<-runif(30)
y<-runif(30)
# center example around 0
x<-x-mean(x)
y<-y-mean(y)
# function to convert to polar coordinates
topolar<-function(x,y){
# calculate angles
alphas<-atan(y/x)
# correct angles per quadrant
quad2<-which(x<0&y>0)
quad3<-which(x<0&y<0)
quad4<-which(x>0&y<0)
alphas[quad2]<-alphas[quad2]+pi
alphas[quad3]<-alphas[quad3]+pi
alphas[quad4]<-alphas[quad4]+2*pi
# calculate distances to 0,0
r<-sqrt(x^2+y^2)
# create output
polar<-data.frame(alphas=alphas,r=r)
}
# call function
polar_out<-topolar(x,y)
# get out angles
the_angles<-polar_out$alphas
回答5:
Another option only in degree
pol2car = function(angle, dist){
co = dist*sin(angle)
ca = dist*cos(angle)
return(list(x=ca, y=co))
}
pol2car(angle = 45, dist = sqrt(2))
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16351178/r-converting-cartesian-coordinates-to-polar-coordinates-and-then-calculating-d