Hey Steve, All,

I've been thinking about this a bit and am a bit conflicted, but I would say it 
should probably not be required to include both. Not completely sure we are all 
on the same page, so if this is off base, I apologize for confusing the issue.

The real advantage to requiring that data be presented both in a projected 
coordinate system (x(x) y(y)) and a geographic coordinate system (lat(x,y) 
lon(x,y)) is that a person can plan on never needing to perform transformations 
from projected to geographic coordinates. 

However, this information is essentially redundant because there are well known 
techniques to convert to/from projected coordinate systems and their 
bas-geographic coordinate systems. This is akin to offering the same data 
converted into two unit systems. 

Since the CF conventions do not attempt to support ALL projections (grid 
mappings), but rather a subset for which it is not prohibitive to perform 
conversions, I tend to think that presenting data using those projected 
coordinate systems only is OK. Yes, this puts some responsibility on the CF 
compliant software developer to be able to perform geographic projections, but 
there are some up sides too.

For data which is spatially massive, like high resolution satellite imagery for 
example, storing the axis definition as two vectors of projected coordinates 
requires orders of magnitude less space than storing two 2D arrays of lat/lon 
cell locations. Additionally, for grids of this type, it would likely be 
unreasonable to perform spatial intersection calculations in anything but the 
native "regular" grid space.

So, I think that a "grid_mapping" (meta-information) specifying the parameters 
of the projected coordinate system should be required if the coordinates 
represent projected real-world locations. But, the lat/lon locations 
corresponding to that grid mapping should not be strictly required.

While it seems convoluted, it may make some sense to get more specific about 
these issues by saying something like: Non-standard (from appendix F) grid 
mappings may be used but in this case the latitude/longitude locations of the 
grid cells must be supplied.

Just my 2-cents. Hopefully this is helpful.

Dave Blodgett
Center for Integrated Data Analytics (CIDA)
USGS WI Water Science Center
8505 Research Way Middleton WI 53562
608-821-3899 | 608-628-5855 (cell)
http://cida.usgs.gov


On Jul 8, 2011, at 11:51 AM, Steve Hankin wrote:

> Hi All,
> 
> Section 4.1 says: 
> (http://cf-pcmdi.llnl.gov/documents/cf-conventions/1.5/cf-conventions.html#coordinate-types)
> "Coordinate types other than latitude, longitude, vertical, and time are 
> allowed. To identify generic spatial coordinates we recommend that the axis 
> attribute be attached to these coordinates and given one of the values X, Y 
> or Z."
> This is in contradiction to section 5.6:  
> (http://cf-pcmdi.llnl.gov/documents/cf-conventions/1.5/cf-conventions.html#grid-mappings-and-projections)
> "When the coordinate variables for a horizontal grid are not longitude and 
> latitude, it is required that the true latitude and longitude coordinates be 
> supplied via the coordinates attribute."
> Section 5.6 was added after many years of CF usage in which non-lat-long 
> coordinate systems were regarded as valid CF files.  There are "climate and 
> forecast" applications in which numerical experiments are performed in purely 
> theoretical coordinate systems -- say, ocean models on cyclic coordinates 
> over an idealized ocean basin.  (Much less common today than 20 years ago.)
> 
> This contradiction needs to be resolved.  My opinion is that it is section 
> 5.6 that should be revised to say that "grid_mapping" is a tool that is 
> available **if a mapping is needed** -- rather than as a required attribute 
> whenever the coordinates are not conventional lat-long.
> 
> Opinions?
> 
>     - Steve
> 
> ==============================================
> 
> On 7/7/2011 4:54 PM, John Caron wrote:
>> 
>> On 6/30/2011 1:26 PM, Randy Horne wrote: 
>>> Paragraph 5.6 Coordinate Reference Systems, Grid 
>>> Mappings, and Projections, first sentence: 
>>> 
>>> When the coordinate variables for a horizontal grid are not longitude and 
>>> latitude, it is required that the true latitude and longitude coordinates 
>>> be supplied via the coordinates attribute. 
>>> 
>>> Are there any exceptions to this "rule" ? 
>>> 
>>> The reason for asking is based on a scenario where the coordinate system 
>>> and constituent locations for the data points associated with the gridded 
>>> data set can be determined solely based on the grid mapping. 
>>> 
>>> The reason for wanting to do this is to minimize the size of the netCDF 
>>> file, and the hardware resources required to process, store, and distribute 
>>> the file. 
>>> 
>>> 
>> Hi Randy: 
>> 
>> There has been no formal exception granted from this rule. The java netcdf 
>> library does not require lat/lon as long as a valid grid mapping is 
>> supplied. In that case, the lat/lon arrays are 2D, and can be a significant 
>> size. When writing "CF compliant" netcdf files (eg from netcdf subset 
>> service), the user is allowed to decide to include lat/lon or not. 
>> Technically if not included, the files are not fully CF compliant. 
>> 
>> CF has mostly thought about how to make archival model data as 
>> self-contained as possible, thus the insistence on lat/lon arrays. I think 
>> there are other valid uses of netcdf-CF files, eg as an exchange format, and 
>> that the lat/lon arrays should be optional. There is currently no mechanism, 
>> eg a "profile" of CF to allow that. 
>> 
>> John 
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