NAME
grdgradient - Compute directional derivative or gradient from 2-D grd
file representing z(x,y)
SYNOPSIS
grdgradient in_grdfile -Gout_grdfile [ -Aazim[/azim2] ] [ -D[c][o][n] ]
[ -Lflag ] [ -M ] [ -N[e][t][amp][/sigma[/offset]] ] [ -Sslopefile ] [
-V ]
DESCRIPTION
grdgradient may be used to compute the directional derivative in a
given direction (-A), or the direction (-S) [and the magnitude (-D)]
of the vector gradient of the data.
Estimated values in the first/last row/column of output depend on
boundary conditions (see -L).
in_grdfile
2-D grd file from which to compute directional derivative.
-G Name of the output grdfile for the directional derivative.
OPTIONS
No space between the option flag and the associated arguments.
Use upper case for the option flags and lower case for modifiers.
-A Azimuthal direction for a directional derivative; azim is the
angle in the x,y plane measured in degrees positive clockwise
from north (the +y direction) toward east (the +x direction).
The negative of the directional derivative, -[dz/dx*sin(azim) +
dz/dy*cos(azim)], is found; negation yields positive values when
the slope of z(x,y) is downhill in the azim direction, the
correct sense for shading the illumination of an image (see
grdimage and grdview) by a light source above the x,y plane
shining from the azim direction. Optionally, supply two
azimuths, -Aazim/azim2, in which case the gradients in each of
these directions are calculated and the one larger in magnitude
is retained; this is useful for illuminating data with two
directions of lineated structures, e.g. -A0/270 illuminates from
the north (top) and west (left).
-D Find the direction of the gradient of the data. By default, the
directions are measured clockwise from north, as azim in -A
above. Append c to use conventional cartesian angles measured
counterclockwise from the positive x (east) direction. Append o
to report orientations (0-180) rather than directions (0-360).
Append n to add 90 degrees to all angles (e.g., to give
orientation of lineated features).
-L Boundary condition flag may be x or y or xy indicating data is
periodic in range of x or y or both, or flag may be g indicating
geographical conditions (x and y are lon and lat). [Default uses
"natural" conditions (second partial derivative normal to edge is
zero).]
-M By default the units of grdgradient are in
units_of_z/units_of_dx_and_dy. However, the user may choose this
option to convert dx,dy in degrees of longitude,latitude into
meters, so that the units of grdgradient are in z_units/meter.
-N Normalization. [Default: no normalization.] The actual
gradients g are offset and scaled to produce normalized gradients
gn with a maximum output magnitude of amp. If amp is not given,
default amp = 1. If offset is not given, it is set to the
average of g. -N yields gn = amp * (g - offset)/max(abs(g -
offset)). -Ne normalizes using a cumulative Laplace distribution
yielding gn = amp * (1.0 - exp(sqrt(2) * (g - offset)/sigma))
where sigma is estimated using the L1 norm of (g - offset) if it
is not given. -Nt normalizes using a cumulative Cauchy
distribution yielding gn = (2 * amp / PI) * atan( (g -
offset)/sigma) where sigma is estimated using the L2 norm of (g -
offset) if it is not given.
-S Name of output grdfile with scalar magnitudes of gradient
vectors. Requires -D.
-V Selects verbose mode, which will send progress reports to stderr
[Default runs "silently"].
HINTS
If you don't know what -N options to use to make an intensity file for
grdimage or grdview, a good first try is -Ne0.6.
If you want to make several illuminated maps of subregions of a large
data set, and you need the illumination effects to be consistent
across all the maps, use the -N option and supply the same value of
sigma and offset to grdgradient for each map. A good guess is offset
= 0 and sigma found by grdinfo -L2 or -L1 applied to an unnormalized
gradient grd.
If you simply need the x- or y-derivatives of the grid, use grdmath.
EXAMPLES
To make a file for illuminating the data in geoid.grd using exp-
normalized gradients imitating light sources in the north and west
directions, do
grdgradient geoid.grd -A0/270 -Ggradients.grd -Ne0.6 -V
To find the azimuth orientations of seafloor fabric in the file
topo.grd, try
grdgradient topo.grd -Snao -Gazimuths.grd -V
SEE ALSO
gmt, gmtdefaults, grdhisteq, grdimage, grdview, grdvector
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