Kavrayskiy VII projection

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Revision as of 02:08, 14 May 2024 by imported>Justinkunimune (Undid good-faith revision 1223579895 by 69.174.145.92 (talk). The previous version made more sense. The simple formulation makes it surprising that the distortion metrics are so low, and the low distortion metrics make it surprising that it's rarely used.)
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Kavrayskiy VII projection of the Earth
The Kavrayskiy VII projection with Tissot's indicatrix of deformation

The Kavrayskiy VII projection is a map projection invented by Soviet cartographer Vladimir V. Kavrayskiy in 1939[1] for use as a general-purpose pseudocylindrical projection. Like the Robinson projection, it is a compromise intended to produce good-quality maps with low distortion overall. It scores well in that respect compared to other popular projections, such as the Winkel tripel,[2][3] despite straight, evenly spaced parallels and a simple formulation. Regardless, it has not been widely used outside the former Soviet Union.[3]

The projection is defined as

x=3λ213(φπ)2y=φ

where λ is the longitude, and φ is the latitude in radians.

See also

References

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