| drdazl_c |
|
Table of contents
Procedure
drdazl_c ( Derivative of rectangular w.r.t. AZ/EL )
void drdazl_c ( SpiceDouble range,
SpiceDouble az,
SpiceDouble el,
SpiceBoolean azccw,
SpiceBoolean elplsz,
SpiceDouble jacobi [3][3] )
AbstractCompute the Jacobian matrix of the transformation from azimuth/elevation to rectangular coordinates. Required_ReadingNone. KeywordsCOORDINATES DERIVATIVES MATRIX Brief_I/OVARIABLE I/O DESCRIPTION -------- --- -------------------------------------------------- range I Distance of a point from the origin. az I Azimuth of input point in radians. el I Elevation of input point in radians. azccw I Flag indicating how azimuth is measured. elplsz I Flag indicating how elevation is measured. jacobi O Matrix of partial derivatives. Detailed_Input
range is the distance from the origin of the input point
specified by `range', `az', and `el'.
Negative values for `range' are not allowed.
Units are arbitrary and are considered to match those
of the rectangular coordinate system associated with the
output matrix `jacobi'.
az is the azimuth of the point. This is the angle between
the projection onto the XY plane of the vector from
the origin to the point and the +X axis of the
reference frame. `az' is zero at the +X axis.
The way azimuth is measured depends on the value of
the logical flag `azccw'. See the description of the
argument `azccw' for details.
The range (i.e., the set of allowed values) of `az' is
unrestricted. See the -Exceptions section for a
discussion on the `az' range.
Units are radians.
el is the elevation of the point. This is the angle
between the vector from the origin to the point and
the XY plane. `el' is zero at the XY plane.
The way elevation is measured depends on the value of
the logical flag `elplsz'. See the description of the
argument `elplsz' for details.
The range (i.e., the set of allowed values) of `el' is
[-pi/2, pi/2], but no error checking is done to ensure
that `el' is within this range. See the -Exceptions
section for a discussion on the `el' range.
Units are radians.
azccw is a flag indicating how the azimuth is measured.
If `azccw' is SPICETRUE, the azimuth increases in the
counterclockwise direction; otherwise `az' increases
in the clockwise direction.
elplsz if a flag indicating how the elevation is measured.
If `elplsz' is SPICETRUE, the elevation increases from
the XY plane toward +Z; otherwise toward -Z.
Detailed_Output
jacobi is the matrix of partial derivatives of the
transformation from azimuth/elevation to rectangular
coordinates. It has the form
.- -.
| dx/drange dx/daz dx/del |
| |
| dy/drange dy/daz dy/del |
| |
| dz/drange dz/daz dz/del |
`- -'
evaluated at the input values of `range', `az' and `el'.
`x', `y', and `z' are given by the familiar formulae
x = range * cos( az ) * cos( el )
y = range * sin( azsnse * az ) * cos( el )
z = range * sin( eldir * el )
where `azsnse' is +1 when `azccw' is SPICETRUE and -1
otherwise, and `eldir' is +1 when `elplsz' is SPICETRUE
and -1 otherwise.
ParametersNone. Exceptions
1) If the value of the input parameter `range' is negative, the
error SPICE(VALUEOUTOFRANGE) is signaled by a routine in the
call tree of this routine.
2) If the value of the input argument `el' is outside the
range [-pi/2, pi/2], the results may not be as
expected.
3) If the value of the input argument `az' is outside the
range [0, 2*pi], the value will be mapped to a value
inside the range that differs from the input value by an
integer multiple of 2*pi.
FilesNone. Particulars
It is often convenient to describe the motion of an object
in azimuth/elevation coordinates. It is also convenient to
manipulate vectors associated with the object in rectangular
coordinates.
The transformation of an azimuth/elevation state into an
equivalent rectangular state makes use of the Jacobian matrix
of the transformation between the two systems.
Given a state in latitudinal coordinates,
( r, az, el, dr, daz, del )
the velocity in rectangular coordinates is given by the matrix
equation
t | t
(dx, dy, dz) = jacobi| * (dr, daz, del)
|(r,az,el)
This routine computes the matrix
|
jacobi|
|(r,az,el)
In the azimuth/elevation coordinate system, several conventions
exist on how azimuth and elevation are measured. Using the `azccw'
and `elplsz' flags, users indicate which conventions shall be used.
See the descriptions of these input arguments for details.
Examples
The numerical results shown for this example may differ across
platforms. The results depend on the SPICE kernels used as
input, the compiler and supporting libraries, and the machine
specific arithmetic implementation.
1) Find the azimuth/elevation state of Venus as seen from the
DSS-14 station at a given epoch. Map this state back to
rectangular coordinates as a check.
Task description
================
In this example, we will obtain the apparent state of Venus as
seen from the DSS-14 station in the DSS-14 topocentric
reference frame. We will use a station frames kernel and
transform the resulting rectangular coordinates to azimuth,
elevation and range and its derivatives using recazl_c and
dazldr_c.
We will map this state back to rectangular coordinates using
azlrec_c and drdazl_c.
In order to introduce the usage of the logical flags `azccw'
and `elplsz', we will request the azimuth to be measured
clockwise and the elevation positive towards +Z
axis of the DSS-14_TOPO reference frame.
Kernels
=======
Use the meta-kernel shown below to load the required SPICE
kernels.
KPL/MK
File name: drdazl_ex1.tm
This meta-kernel is intended to support operation of SPICE
example programs. The kernels shown here should not be
assumed to contain adequate or correct versions of data
required by SPICE-based user applications.
In order for an application to use this meta-kernel, the
kernels referenced here must be present in the user's
current working directory.
The names and contents of the kernels referenced
by this meta-kernel are as follows:
File name Contents
--------- --------
de430.bsp Planetary ephemeris
naif0011.tls Leapseconds
earth_720101_070426.bpc Earth historical
binary PCK
earthstns_itrf93_050714.bsp DSN station SPK
earth_topo_050714.tf DSN station FK
\begindata
KERNELS_TO_LOAD = ( 'de430.bsp',
'naif0011.tls',
'earth_720101_070426.bpc',
'earthstns_itrf93_050714.bsp',
'earth_topo_050714.tf' )
\begintext
End of meta-kernel.
Example code begins here.
/.
Program drdazl_ex1
./
#include <stdio.h>
#include "SpiceUsr.h"
int main( )
{
/.
Local parameters
./
#define META "drdazl_ex1.tm"
/.
Local variables
./
SpiceChar * abcorr;
SpiceChar * obs;
SpiceChar * obstim;
SpiceChar * ref;
SpiceChar * target;
SpiceDouble az;
SpiceDouble azlvel [3];
SpiceDouble drectn [3];
SpiceDouble el;
SpiceDouble et;
SpiceDouble jacobi [3][3];
SpiceDouble lt;
SpiceDouble state [6];
SpiceDouble r;
SpiceDouble rectan [3];
SpiceBoolean azccw;
SpiceBoolean elplsz;
/.
Load SPICE kernels.
./
furnsh_c ( META );
/.
Convert the observation time to seconds past J2000 TDB.
./
obstim = "2003 OCT 13 06:00:00.000000 UTC";
str2et_c ( obstim, &et );
/.
Set the target, observer, observer frame, and
aberration corrections.
./
target = "VENUS";
obs = "DSS-14";
ref = "DSS-14_TOPO";
abcorr = "CN+S";
/.
Compute the observer-target state.
./
spkezr_c ( target, et, ref, abcorr, obs, state, < );
/.
Convert position to azimuth/elevation coordinates,
with azimuth increasing clockwise and elevation
positive towards +Z axis of the DSS-14_TOPO
reference frame
./
azccw = SPICEFALSE;
elplsz = SPICETRUE;
recazl_c ( state, azccw, elplsz, &r, &az, &el );
/.
Convert velocity to azimuth/elevation coordinates.
./
dazldr_c ( state[0], state[1], state[2], azccw, elplsz, jacobi );
mxv_c ( jacobi, state+3, azlvel );
/.
As a check, convert the azimuth/elevation state back to
rectangular coordinates.
./
azlrec_c ( r, az, el, azccw, elplsz, rectan );
drdazl_c ( r, az, el, azccw, elplsz, jacobi );
mxv_c ( jacobi, azlvel, drectn );
printf( "\n" );
printf( "AZ/EL coordinates:\n" );
printf( "\n" );
printf( " Range (km) = %19.8f\n", r );
printf( " Azimuth (deg) = %19.8f\n", az * dpr_c() );
printf( " Elevation (deg) = %19.8f\n", el * dpr_c() );
printf( "\n" );
printf( "AZ/EL velocity:\n" );
printf( "\n" );
printf( " d Range/dt (km/s) = %19.8f\n", azlvel[0] );
printf( " d Azimuth/dt (deg/s) = %19.8f\n",
azlvel[1] * dpr_c() );
printf( " d Elevation/dt (deg/s) = %19.8f\n",
azlvel[2] * dpr_c() );
printf( "\n" );
printf( "Rectangular coordinates:\n" );
printf( "\n" );
printf( " X (km) = %19.8f\n", state[0] );
printf( " Y (km) = %19.8f\n", state[1] );
printf( " Z (km) = %19.8f\n", state[2] );
printf( "\n" );
printf( "Rectangular velocity:\n" );
printf( "\n" );
printf( " dX/dt (km/s) = %19.8f\n", state[3] );
printf( " dY/dt (km/s) = %19.8f\n", state[4] );
printf( " dZ/dt (km/s) = %19.8f\n", state[5] );
printf( "\n" );
printf( "Rectangular coordinates from inverse mapping:\n" );
printf( "\n" );
printf( " X (km) = %19.8f\n", rectan[0] );
printf( " Y (km) = %19.8f\n", rectan[1] );
printf( " Z (km) = %19.8f\n", rectan[2] );
printf( "\n" );
printf( "Rectangular velocity from inverse mapping:\n" );
printf( "\n" );
printf( " dX/dt (km/s) = %19.8f\n", drectn[0] );
printf( " dY/dt (km/s) = %19.8f\n", drectn[1] );
printf( " dZ/dt (km/s) = %19.8f\n", drectn[2] );
printf( "\n" );
return ( 0 );
}
When this program was executed on a Mac/Intel/cc/64-bit
platform, the output was:
AZ/EL coordinates:
Range (km) = 245721478.99272084
Azimuth (deg) = 294.48543372
Elevation (deg) = -48.94609726
AZ/EL velocity:
d Range/dt (km/s) = -4.68189834
d Azimuth/dt (deg/s) = 0.00402256
d Elevation/dt (deg/s) = -0.00309156
Rectangular coordinates:
X (km) = 66886767.37916667
Y (km) = 146868551.77222887
Z (km) = -185296611.10841590
Rectangular velocity:
dX/dt (km/s) = 6166.04150307
dY/dt (km/s) = -13797.77164550
dZ/dt (km/s) = -8704.32385654
Rectangular coordinates from inverse mapping:
X (km) = 66886767.37916658
Y (km) = 146868551.77222890
Z (km) = -185296611.10841590
Rectangular velocity from inverse mapping:
dX/dt (km/s) = 6166.04150307
dY/dt (km/s) = -13797.77164550
dZ/dt (km/s) = -8704.32385654
RestrictionsNone. Literature_ReferencesNone. Author_and_InstitutionJ. Diaz del Rio (ODC Space) Version-CSPICE Version 1.0.0, 30-DEC-2021 (JDR) Index_EntriesJacobian matrix of rectangular w.r.t. AZ/EL coordinates range, azimuth and elevation to rectangular derivative Range, AZ and EL to rectangular velocity conversion Link to routine drdazl_c source file drdazl_c.c |
Fri Dec 31 18:41:04 2021