comp.lang.idl-pvwave archive
Messages from Usenet group comp.lang.idl-pvwave, compiled by Paulo Penteado

Home » Public Forums » archive » Spherical Harmonics.
Show: Today's Messages :: Show Polls :: Message Navigator
E-mail to friend 
Return to the default flat view Create a new topic Submit Reply
Re: spherical harmonics [message #21981 is a reply to message #3853] Fri, 13 October 2000 00:00 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
John C. Wright is currently offline  John C. Wright
Messages: 1
Registered: October 2000
Junior Member
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Klaus Gottschaldt wrote:

> Subject: spherical harmonics
>
> Hallo!
>
> I want to analyze data on a sphere, representing them by spherical
> harmonic coefficients.
> This is somehow like a Fourier transform, but based on Legendre
> polynoms, which are
> defined on the surface of a sphere.
> Unlike wavelets, this transform is global.
> My data are given in the form [longitude, latitude, data_value], where
> longitude, latitude
> and data_value are vectors of the same length.
> Data points are randomly scattered over the sphere with a resolution of
> approx. 100km
> on the Earth's surface.
>
> Does somebody know, how to do this transform with idl?
>
> Klaus

Hi Klaus,
I may be in need of such a transform in the near future, also. But for
now, the MIDL library has a function, legendre_pol.pro, that returns
associated legendre polynomials, then it would be possible to build the
transform, though I recognize this would be a bit of work, though the
longitudinal transform could be done with IDL's FFT.

A word of warning, there are many different Spherical Harmonic
decompositions, so make sure your basis functions and normalizations are
the same between applications. Let the list know if you find any publicly
available solutions, I for one, would be interested.

-john
[Message index]
 
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Previous Topic: Re: obj graphics fly-thru help
Next Topic: Re: Contour plots / ps files

-=] Back to Top [=-
[ Syndicate this forum (XML) ] [ RSS ] [ PDF ]

Current Time: Fri Oct 10 06:15:47 PDT 2025

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.80587 seconds