areamat
Surface area covered by nonzero values in binary data grid
Syntax
A = areamat(BW,R)
A = areamat(BW,R,ellipsoid)
[A, cellarea] = areamat(...)
Description
A = areamat(BW,R)
returns the surface area covered by the elements of the
binary regular data grid BW
, which contain the value 1
(true
). BW
can be the result of a logical
expression such as BW = (topo60c > 0)
. Specify
R
as a GeographicCellsReference
object. The
RasterSize
property of R
must be consistent
with size(BW)
.
The output A
expresses surface area as a
fraction of the surface area of the unit sphere (4*pi), so the result
ranges from 0 to 1.
A = areamat(BW,R,ellipsoid)
calculates the surface area on the ellipsoid
or sphere defined by the input ellipsoid
, which can be a referenceSphere
, referenceEllipsoid
, or oblateSpheroid
object, or a vector of the form [semimajor_axis
eccentricity]
. The units of the output, A
, are the
square of the length units in which the semimajor axis is provided. For example, if
ellipsoid
is replaced with
wgs84Ellipsoid('kilometers')
, then A
is in
square kilometers. If you do not specify ellipsoid
and
R
has a non-empty GeographicCRS
property, then
areamat
uses the ellipsoid contained in the
Spheroid
property of the geocrs
object in the
GeographicCRS
property of R
.
[A, cellarea] = areamat(...)
returns a
vector, cellarea
, describing the area covered by
the data cells in BW
. Because all the cells in
a given row are exactly the same size, only one value is needed per
row. Therefore cellarea
has size M-by-1
,
where M = size(BW,1)
is the number of rows in BW
.
Examples
Tips
Given a regular data grid that is a logical 0-1 matrix, the areamat
function returns the area corresponding to the true, or 1, elements. The input data grid
can be a logical statement, such as (topo60c > 0)
, which is 1
everywhere that topo60c
is greater than 0 meters, and 0 everywhere
else. This is an illustration of that matrix:
This calculation is based on the areaquad
function
and is therefore limited only by the granularity of the cellular data.