Field (geography)

A geographic field, "mean annual precipitation," visualized with an isarithmic map.

In the context of spatial analysis, geographic information systems, and geographic information science, a field is a property that fills space, and varies over space, such as temperature or density.[1] This use of the term has been adopted from physics and mathematics, due to their similarity to physical fields (vector or scalar) such as the electromagnetic field or gravitational field. Synonymous terms include spatially dependent variable (geostatistics), statistical surface ( thematic mapping), and intensive property (physics and chemistry) and crossbreeding between these disciplines is common. The simplest formal model for a field is the function, which yields a single value given a point in space (i.e., t = f(x, y, z) )[2]

  1. ^ Peuquet, Donna J., Barry Smith, Berit Brogaard, ed. The Ontology of Fields, Report of a Specialist Meeting Held under the Auspices of the Varenius Project, June 11–13, 1998, 1999
  2. ^ Kemp, Karen K.; Vckovsky, Andrej (1998). "Towards an ontology of fields". Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on GeoComputation. Archived from the original on 2021-10-26. Retrieved 2021-10-26.

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