(Redirected from Digital terrain model)
3D rendering of a DEM of Tithonium Chasma on
Mars
A 'digital elevation model' ('DEM') is a
digital representation of ground
surface topography or
terrain. It is also widely known as a 'digital terrain model' ('DTM'). A DEM can be represented as a
raster (a grid of
squares) or as a
triangular irregular network. DEMs are commonly built using
remote sensing techniques, however, they may also be built from land
surveying. DEMs are used often in
geographic information systems, and are the most common basis for digitally-produced
relief maps.
Production
Digital elevation models may be prepared in a number of ways, but they are frequently obtained by
remote sensing rather than direct
survey. One powerful technique for generating digital elevation models is
interferometric synthetic aperture radar; two passes of a radar satellite (such as
RADARSAT-1) suffice to generate a digital elevation map tens of kilometers on a side with a resolution of around ten meters. One also obtains an image of the surface cover.
Older methods of generating DEMs often involve
interpolating digital contour maps that may have been produced by direct survey of the land surface; this method is still used in mountain areas, where interferometry is not always satisfactory. Note that the contour data or any other sampled elevation datasets (by GPS or ground survey) are not DEMs, but may be considered Digital terrain models. A DEM implies that elevation is available continuously at each location in the study area.
The quality of a DEM is a measure of how accurate elevation is at each pixel (absolute accuracy) and how accurately is the morphology presented (relative accuracy). Several factors play an important role for quality of DEM-derived products:
★ terrain roughness;
★ sampling density (elevation data collection method);
★ grid resolution or pixel size;
★ interpolation algorithm;
★ vertical resolution;
★ terrain analysis algorithm;
Uses
Common uses of DEMs include:
★ extracting terrain parameters
★ modeling water flow or mass movement (for example
avalanches)
★ creation of
relief maps
★ rendering of 3D
visualizations.
★ creation of physical models (including
raised-relief maps)
★ rectification of
aerial photography or
satellite imagery.
★ reduction (terrain correction) of
gravity measurements (
gravimetry,
physical geodesy).
★ terrain analyses in
geomorphology and
physical geography
Differences between DEMs and DTMs
A ''digital elevation model'' — also sometimes called a ''digital surface model'' (DSM) — generally refers to a representation of the earth's surface (or subset of this), including features such as vegetation, buildings, bridges, etc. The DEM often comprises much of the raw dataset, which may have been acquired through techniques such as photogrammetry, LiDAR, IfSAR, land surveying, etc. A ''digital terrain model'' (DTM) on the other hand is (generally) a filtered version of this surface, and hence can be a post-processed version of what was originally a DEM.
[1] The DTM provides a so-called bare-earth model, devoid of landscape features. While a DEM may be useful for landscape modelling, city modelling and visualisation applications, a DTM is often required for flood or drainage modelling, land-use studies, geological applications, and much more.
[2]
Sources
A free DEM of the whole world called
GTOPO30 (30 arcsecond resolution, approx. 1 km) is available, but its quality is variable and in some areas it is very poor. A much higher quality DEM from the
Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) is also freely available for most of the globe and represents elevation at a 3 arc-second resolution (around 90 m). It has also been developed at 1 arc-second (30 m) resolution, but this has only been declassified for United States territory. The limitation with both datasets is that they cover continental landmasses only, and SRTM does not cover the polar regions and has mountain and desert no data (void) areas. Submarine elevation (known as
bathymetry) data is generated using ship mounted depth soundings. The
SRTM30Plus dataset (used in
NASA World Wind) attempts to combine GTOPO30, SRTM and bathymetric data to produce a truly global elevation model.
[3]
The most usual grid (
raster) is between 50 and 500 meters. In gravimetry e.g., the primary grid may be 50 m, but is switched to 100 or 500 meters in distances of about 5 or 10 kilometers.
Many national mapping agencies produce their own DEMs, often of a higher resolution and quality, but frequently these have to be purchased, and the cost is usually prohibitive to all except public authorities and large corporations.
Free DEMs are also available for
Mars: the MEGDR, or Mission Experiment Gridded Data Record, from the
Mars Global Surveyor's Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) instrument; and NASA's Mars Digital Terrain Model (DTM).
[4]
United States
The
US Geological Survey produces the National Elevation Dataset, a seamless DEM for the contiguous United States, Hawaii and Puerto Rico based on 7.5' topographic mapping. As of the beginning of 2006, this replaces the earlier DEM tiled format (one DEM per USGS
topographic map).
[5][6]
References
★
Terrain Analysis Home Page Paula Messina
★
Terrain Analysis: Principles and Applications, , J.P., Wilson, , 2000,
1. Digital Elevation Models
2. Severn Tidal Tributaries Catchment Flood Management Plan – Scoping Stage, , , , Environment Agency, ,
3. see Martin Gamache's paper on free sources of global data, http://www.terrainmap.com/downloads/Gamache_final_web.pdf
4. A basic guide for using Digital Elevation Models with Terragen
5. http://eros.usgs.gov/DEMNotice.html
6. see Herbert Glarner's paper on using USGS data, http://herbert.gandraxa.com/herbert/dem.asp
DEM file formats
★
USGS DEM
★
SDTS DEM
★
DTED
External links
★
GTOPO30 Homepage
★ [ftp://edcftp.cr.usgs.gov/pub/data/gtopo30/global/ GTOPO30 FTP Server]
★
SRTM Homepage
★
SRTM30 Plus Homepage
★
Terrainmap Homepage
★
More information about available DEM data