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Mercator projection
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=== Cylindrical projections === Although the surface of Earth is best modelled by an [[reference ellipsoid|oblate ellipsoid of revolution]], for [[scale (map)#Large scale, medium scale, small scale|small scale]] maps the ellipsoid is approximated by a sphere of radius ''a'', where ''a'' is approximately 6,371 km. This spherical approximation of Earth can be modelled by a smaller sphere of radius ''R'', called the ''globe'' in this section. The globe determines the scale of the map. The various [[map projections#Cylindrical|cylindrical projections]] specify how the geographic detail is transferred from the globe to a cylinder tangential to it at the equator. The cylinder is then unrolled to give the planar map.{{sfn|Snyder|1987|pp=37β95}}{{sfn|Snyder|1993}}{{pn|date=January 2023}} The fraction {{sfrac|''R''|''a''}} is called the [[scale (map)#The representative fraction (RF) or principal scale|representative fraction]] (RF) or the [[scale (map)#The representative fraction (RF) or principal scale|principal scale]] of the projection. For example, a Mercator map printed in a book might have an equatorial width of 13.4 cm corresponding to a globe radius of 2.13 cm and an RF of approximately {{sfrac|1|300M}} (M is used as an abbreviation for 1,000,000 in writing an RF) whereas Mercator's original 1569 map has a width of 198 cm corresponding to a globe radius of 31.5 cm and an RF of about {{sfrac|1|20M}}. [[File:Cylindrical Projection basics2.svg|center|400px]] A cylindrical map projection is specified by formulae linking the geographic coordinates of latitude ''Ο'' and longitude ''Ξ»'' to Cartesian coordinates on the map with origin on the equator and ''x''-axis along the equator. By construction, all points on the same meridian lie on the same ''generator''{{efn|A generator of a cylinder is a straight line on the surface parallel to the axis of the cylinder.}} of the cylinder at a constant value of ''x'', but the distance ''y'' along the generator (measured from the equator) is an arbitrary{{efn|1=The function ''y''(''Ο'') is not completely arbitrary: it must be monotonic increasing and antisymmetric (''y''(β''Ο'') = β''y''(''Ο''), so that ''y''(0)=0): it is normally continuous with a continuous first derivative.}} function of latitude, ''y''(''Ο''). In general this function does not describe the geometrical projection (as of light rays onto a screen) from the centre of the globe to the cylinder, which is only one of an unlimited number of ways to conceptually project a cylindrical map. Since the cylinder is tangential to the globe at the equator, the [[scale (map)|scale factor]] between globe and cylinder is unity on the equator but nowhere else. In particular since the radius of a parallel, or circle of latitude, is ''R'' cos ''Ο'', the corresponding parallel on the map must have been stretched by a factor of {{nowrap|{{sfrac|1|cos ''Ο''}} {{=}} sec ''Ο''}}. This scale factor on the parallel is conventionally denoted by ''k'' and the corresponding scale factor on the meridian is denoted by ''h''.<ref name=SnyderManual>[[#CITEREFSnyder1987|Snyder.]] Working Manual, page 20.</ref>
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