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Viewshed analysis

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189:, of the radio tower can be incorporated into the calculation by adding two values. The first value is the lowest possible azimuth angle and the second value is the highest possible azimuth angle. The program will analyze the viewshed only within these given azimuth angles. A vertical angle can be added as well. The values for vertical angle are from 90° (looking straight up) to -90° (looking straight down). This variable would need to be added in cases where the radio tower emits a very narrow vertical beam. The final variable used in the viewshed analysis is the radius value. In the case of the radio tower, if the radio signal has a limited range, perhaps 10 miles, then the radius variable can be set to limit the viewshed analysis to a 10-mile radius. 22: 220: 109:(DEM) to determine visibility to or from a particular cell. The location of this particular cell varies depending on the needs of the analysis. For example, a viewshed analysis is commonly used to locate communication towers or determining the view from a road. Viewsheds can be calculated using an individual point such as a tower or multiple points such as a line representing a road. When analyzing a line segment, each of the 211: 259: 173:
by using an algorithm that estimates the difference of elevation from one cell (the viewpoint cell) to the next (the target cell). To determine the visibility of a target cell, each cell between the viewpoint cell and target cell is examined for line of sight. Where cells of higher value are between
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The algorithm is also based on a given set of variables. When performing a viewshed analysis, several variables can be used to limit or adjust the calculation. For example, if the analysis is to determine the location of a radio tower, the height of the tower could be added to the elevation of that
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across Wyoming. Within the Rock Springs Field Office area there are five different viewsheds to choose from. The example here is viewshed number one. The viewshed indicates the land areas visible from the trails at four different levels from not visible to visible, based on the number of times the
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rovers, they turned to the USGS to map the best possible sites. Part of the analysis included a viewshed of the possible site selections. In this case the viewshed indicates the areas which may or may not be visible by the Mars rovers from each landing site (MER Landing Site Viewshed Analysis).
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Besides tower placement a viewshed analysis can be used for other applications. For example, a viewshed analysis could estimate the impact of the addition of a large building. The viewshed analysis would show all the areas from which the building could be seen as well as any views that would be
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Another way to add the height of the tower is to use an offset variable. Offset values can be added to a sending tower as well as a receiving tower. The offset value is then added to the elevation value of the cell to obtain the actual elevation of each tower.
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the viewpoint and target cells the line of sight is blocked. If the line of sight is blocked then the target cell is determined to not be part of the viewshed. If it is not blocked then it is included in the viewshed.
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Lee, J., & Stucky, D. (1998). On Applying Viewshed Analysis for Determining Least-cost Paths on Digital Elevation Models. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 12(8), 891-905.
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Wu, H., Pan, M., Yao, L., & Luo, B. (2007). A Partition-based Serial Algorithm for Generating Viewshed on Massive DEMs. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 21(9), 955-964.
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area could be seen from the trail. This is an indication of what the pioneers could see as they traveled along the trails of the western frontier (Rock Springs Field Office).
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in mountain areas (Lee and Stucky, 1998). This allows the stations to be placed so that the entire forest can be observed for possible fires.
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location (cell value). If no height is given, then the viewshed analysis uses the cell value of the DEM in which the tower is located.
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Rock Springs Field Office. (2001). National Historical Trail Viewsheds. In Burea of Land Management. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
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along the line is calculated to determine its visible area. The process can also be reversed. For example, when locating a
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Performing a Viewshed Analysis. (2007, March 15). In ArcGIS 9.2 Desktop Help. Retrieved March 3, 2009, from www.esri.com
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The viewshed analysis can also have a limited viewing angle. The viewing angle, or
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obscured from any particular location. Viewshed analyses are also used to locate
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An example of using a viewshed analysis on a line segment is from the
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Kim, Young-Hoon; Rana, Sanjay; Wise, Steve (1 November 2004).
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Viewshed map from National Historic Trails in the vicinity of
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on Mars: the viewshed (red) is overlaid on an elevation map
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surface) from a given location. It is a common part of the
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A viewshed analysis can be performed using one of many
447: 43:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks 89:is a computational algorithm that delineates a 253: 120: 351: 296: 273:(USGS) used a viewshed analysis to assist 328: 192: 74:Learn how and when to remove this message 302: 257: 93:, the area that is visible (on the base 448: 345: 15: 13: 428:National Historic Trails Viewsheds 406:MER Landing Site Viewshed Analysis 14: 472: 421: 303:Cuckovic, Zoran (9 August 2016). 218: 209: 20: 437:EarthScope Viewshed Application 396: 309:Journal of Open Source Software 271:United States Geological Survey 169:. A viewshed is created from a 456:Geographic information systems 1: 289: 103:geographic information system 7: 378:10.1016/j.cageo.2004.07.008 358:Computers & Geosciences 10: 477: 254:A unique viewshed analysis 432:Bureau of Land Management 243:Bureau of Land Management 200:fire observation stations 121:Viewshed analysis process 247:National Historic Trails 157:(Visibility), TNT Mips, 29:This article includes a 269:In another example the 107:digital elevation model 58:more precise citations. 279:Mars Exploration Rover 266: 193:Viewshed analysis uses 101:toolset found in most 261: 230:Rock Springs, Wyoming 137:(r.los, r.viewshed), 461:Communication design 370:2004CG.....30.1019K 330:10.21105/joss.00032 321:2016JOSS....1...32C 267: 129:programs, such as 31:list of references 87:Viewshed analysis 84: 83: 76: 468: 390: 389: 364:(9): 1019–1032. 349: 343: 342: 332: 300: 222: 213: 147:LuciadLightspeed 99:terrain analysis 79: 72: 68: 65: 59: 54:this article by 45:inline citations 24: 23: 16: 476: 475: 471: 470: 469: 467: 466: 465: 446: 445: 424: 399: 394: 393: 350: 346: 301: 297: 292: 256: 235: 234: 233: 232: 225: 224: 223: 215: 214: 195: 143:viewshed plugin 123: 80: 69: 63: 60: 49: 35:related reading 25: 21: 12: 11: 5: 474: 464: 463: 458: 444: 443: 434: 423: 422:External links 420: 419: 418: 415: 412: 409: 403: 398: 395: 392: 391: 344: 294: 293: 291: 288: 255: 252: 241:State Office, 227: 226: 217: 216: 208: 207: 206: 205: 204: 194: 191: 122: 119: 82: 81: 39:external links 28: 26: 19: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 473: 462: 459: 457: 454: 453: 451: 442: 438: 435: 433: 429: 426: 425: 416: 413: 410: 407: 404: 401: 400: 387: 383: 379: 375: 371: 367: 363: 359: 355: 348: 340: 336: 331: 326: 322: 318: 314: 310: 306: 299: 295: 287: 284: 280: 276: 272: 264: 260: 251: 248: 244: 240: 231: 221: 212: 203: 201: 190: 188: 183: 179: 175: 172: 168: 167:ERDAS IMAGINE 164: 160: 156: 152: 148: 144: 140: 136: 132: 128: 118: 116: 112: 108: 104: 100: 96: 92: 88: 78: 75: 67: 64:December 2011 57: 53: 47: 46: 40: 36: 32: 27: 18: 17: 397:Bibliography 361: 357: 347: 312: 308: 298: 268: 263:Gusev crater 236: 196: 184: 180: 176: 151:LuciadMobile 124: 86: 85: 70: 61: 50:Please help 42: 430:- from the 56:introducing 450:Categories 290:References 131:ArcGIS Pro 386:0098-3004 339:2475-9066 315:(4): 32. 163:Maptitude 135:GRASS GIS 155:SAGA GIS 115:landfill 111:vertices 91:viewshed 366:Bibcode 317:Bibcode 239:Wyoming 187:azimuth 95:terrain 52:improve 384:  337:  159:ArcMap 37:, or 441:NASA 382:ISSN 335:ISSN 283:Mars 275:NASA 139:QGIS 374:doi 325:doi 277:'s 171:DEM 145:), 127:GIS 452:: 380:. 372:. 362:30 360:. 356:. 333:. 323:. 311:. 307:. 165:, 161:, 153:, 149:, 133:, 41:, 33:, 388:. 376:: 368:: 341:. 327:: 319:: 313:1 141:( 77:) 71:( 66:) 62:( 48:.

Index

list of references
related reading
external links
inline citations
improve
introducing
Learn how and when to remove this message
viewshed
terrain
terrain analysis
geographic information system
digital elevation model
vertices
landfill
GIS
ArcGIS Pro
GRASS GIS
QGIS
viewshed plugin
LuciadLightspeed
LuciadMobile
SAGA GIS
ArcMap
Maptitude
ERDAS IMAGINE
DEM
azimuth
fire observation stations

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