Latitudinally equal-differential polyconic projection
The latitudinally equal-differential polyconic projection is a polyconic map projection in use since 1963 in mainland China. Maps on this projection are produced by China's State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping and other publishers.
Description
As a polyconic projection, the parallels are arcs of circles that are not concentric. The points of no distortion are on the central meridian at 44°N/S latitude. Meridians are convex away from the straight central meridian, and parallels are gently concave away from the equator.The projection is neither equal-area nor conformal; rather, it is a compromise projection.
Maps on this projection do not show the north pole, instead cropping the high latitudes along a straight line. By convention, the projection is centered at 150° such that the Pacific Ocean dominates the center-right of the map and China is placed about 45° west of the central meridian, in a location favorable for low distortion. Greenland is split at the left and right edges of the map, and the northern edge of the map clips the highest regions of the island.
Mathematical definition
The projection was originally defined using a mixture of closed formula and interpolation. The two main formulae are:- The spacing of latitudes on the central meridian satisfies, where is the scaled radius of the earth prior to projection;
- The spacing of longitudes on all parallels satisfies, where is the total projected length of a parallel, and is the distance from the central meridian measured on arc.This formula is equivalent but different from the one originally given in the book, with longitude difference converted to radians and simplified coefficients.
As its definition is inconvenient for general GIS purposes, various attempts have been made to approximate it algebraically.