Generating large circles using scircle
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Hello. I have a question about scircle2 function. Basically I am using that function to generate a circle given centre and radius like this
[lat, lon] = scircle2(centreX,centreY,centreX+rad,centreY);
and then i plot this using
plot(lat,lon);
For small values of cen and rad, i can see the circle no problem. But for large values say over 100, the lat and lon are messed up and the circle is messed up too. Is there a problem with large values with this function? If so, how can i generate a matrix that contains the circle so i can plot it?
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Accepted Answer
Chad Greene
on 31 Jul 2016
I don't think scircle2 wants x or y values, it wants lats and lons. I wrote a circlem function that streamlines the process of plotting circles of a given radius on a map. Perhaps that is what you're looking for?
4 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 1 Aug 2016
With large enough radii, the effects with circlem is the same as what I showed with scircle2. (I thought I had detected a problem but it was because I had forgotten about the factor of 2*Pi in converting Earth radius to circumference.)
More Answers (1)
Walter Roberson
on 31 Jul 2016
I do not think there is any problem. When you start crossing the poles then the points that are a particular distance away (which is what scircle2 calculates) stops being a simple circle.
For example, modifying the example from scircle2:
axesm('mercator','MapLatlimit',[-90 90],'MapLonLimit',[-180 180]);
load coast
plotm(lat,long,'k');
lat1 = -48; lon1 = 77.5;
plotm(lat1, lon1, 'b*');
lat2 = lat1 + [0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100].';
lon2 = repmat(85.5, size(lat2));
plotm(lat2, lon2, 'r*');
[latc,lonc] = scircle2(lat1,lon1,lat2,lon2);
plotm(latc,lonc,'g');

Once your small circle is big enough to cross the pole, then there start to be points to the side that are the right distance away
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