Meteorology: Difference between revisions
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* {{cmd|v.vol.rst}} - useful for 3D spline interpolation between sparse data points. See the Slovakia 3D precipitation voxel isosurfaces screenshot on the {{website|screenshots/viz.php|visualization screenshots}} page. Tutorial can be found in the [http://www.grassbook.org/data_menu2nd.php GRASS book 2nd Ed.], chapter 7. | * {{cmd|v.vol.rst}} - useful for 3D spline interpolation between sparse data points. See the Slovakia 3D precipitation voxel isosurfaces screenshot on the {{website|screenshots/viz.php|visualization screenshots}} page. Tutorial can be found in the [http://www.grassbook.org/data_menu2nd.php GRASS book 2nd Ed.], chapter 7. | ||
== Conventions == | |||
Wind meteo data usually follow a convention different from the GRASS one. First, the wind direction expresses the direction which wind blows FROM and not TO (as a non meteorologist might expect). Second, the code expressing the directions differs from the one adopted by GRASS (for aspect, flow direction, etc.). | |||
Revision as of 08:36, 19 June 2014
Meteorology
GRASS used together with R-stats provides a powerful toolset to analyse meteorological time series and to perform spatio-temporal interpolation.
- Weather symbols to use with GRASS display and cartography modules
- Work in progress: d.barb: Displays wind barbs or variable length straw diagrams given either two raster maps, or vector point data. Like d.rast.arrow, input data is given as magnitude and direction, unlike d.rast.arrow you can also feed it u,v component data. (Hamish), See also Visualizing Terrain Surface Indicies with Scaled Arrows.
- r.in.gdal - useful for importing raster data from very many source data formats.
- r.series - useful for time series analysis of raster data.
- v.surf.rst - useful for 2D spline interpolation between sparse data points.
- v.vol.rst - useful for 3D spline interpolation between sparse data points. See the Slovakia 3D precipitation voxel isosurfaces screenshot on the visualization screenshots page. Tutorial can be found in the GRASS book 2nd Ed., chapter 7.
Conventions
Wind meteo data usually follow a convention different from the GRASS one. First, the wind direction expresses the direction which wind blows FROM and not TO (as a non meteorologist might expect). Second, the code expressing the directions differs from the one adopted by GRASS (for aspect, flow direction, etc.).