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The Albers equal-area conic projection, or Albers projection (named after Heinrich C. Albers), is a conic, equal area map projection that uses two standard parallels. Although scale and shape are not preserved, distortion is minimal between the standard parallels. The Albers projection is used by the United States Geological Survey and the United States Census Bureau. Most of the maps in the '' National Atlas of the United States'' use the Albers projection. It is also one of the standard projections used by the government of British Columbia, and the sole governmental projection for the Yukon.


Formulas


For Sphere

Snyder describes generating formulae for the projection, as well as the projection's characteristics. Coordinates from a spherical datum can be transformed into Albers equal-area conic projection coordinates with the following formulas, where is the radius, \lambda is the longitude, \lambda_0 the reference longitude, \varphi the latitude, \varphi_0 the reference latitude and \varphi_1 and \varphi_2 the standard parallels: :\begin x &= \rho \sin\theta \\ y &= \rho_0 - \rho \cos\theta \end where :\begin n &= \tfrac12 \left(\sin\varphi_1+\sin\varphi_2\right) \\ \theta &= n \left(\lambda - \lambda_0\right) \\ C &= \cos^2 \varphi_1 + 2 n \sin \varphi_1 \\ \rho &= \tfrac\sqrt \\ \rho_0 &= \tfrac\sqrt \end


Lambert equal-area conic

If just one of the two standard parallels of the Albers projection is placed on a pole, the result is the Lambert equal-area conic projection. "Directory of Map Projections"
"Lambert equal-area conic"


See also

*
List of map projections This is a summary of map projections that have articles of their own on Wikipedia or that are otherwise notable Notability is the property of being worthy of notice, having fame, or being considered to be of a high degree of interest, signif ...


References


External links


Mathworld's page on the Albers projectionTable of examples and properties of all common projections
from radicalcartography.net

Map projections Equal-area projections {{cartography-stub