NAME

       surface  -  adjustable  tension  continuous  curvature surface gridding
       algorithm


SYNOPSIS

       surface  [   xyzfile   ]   -Goutputfile.grd   -Ix_inc[m|c][/y_inc[m|c]]
       -Rwest/east/south/north[r] [ -Aaspect_ratio ] [ -Cconvergence_limit ] [
       -H[nrec] ] [ -L ] [ -Lllower ] [ -Luupper ] [ -Nmax_iterations ] [ -Q ]
       [  -Ssearch_radius[m]  ]  [  -Ttension_factor[ib] ] [ -V[l] ] [ -Zover-
       relaxation_factor ] [ -: ] [ -bi[s][n] ]


DESCRIPTION

       surface reads randomly-spaced (x,y,z) triples from standard  input  [or
       xyzfile]  and  produces  a  binary  grdfile of gridded values z(x,y) by
       solving:

               (1 - T) * L (L (z)) + T * L (z) = 0

       where T is a tension factor between 0 and 1, and L indicates the Lapla-
       cian  operator.   T = 0 gives the "minimum curvature" solution which is
       equivalent to SuperMISP and the ISM  packages.  Minimum  curvature  can
       cause  undesired  oscillations  and  false  local maxima or minima (See
       Smith and Wessel, 1990), and you may wish to use  T  >  0  to  suppress
       these  effects.   Experience  suggests  T ~ 0.25 usually looks good for
       potential field data and T should be larger (T ~ 0.35) for steep topog-
       raphy  data.  T  =  1 gives a harmonic surface (no maxima or minima are
       possible except at control data points). It  is  recommended  that  the
       user  pre-process the data with blockmean, blockmedian, or blockmode to
       avoid spatial aliasing and eliminate redundant data.   You  may  impose
       lower  and/or upper bounds on the solution. These may be entered in the
       form of a fixed value, a grdfile with values, or simply  be  the  mini-
       mum/maximum input data values.

       xyzfile
              3  column  ASCII  file  [or binary, see -b] holding (x,y,z) data
              values. If no file is specified, surface will read from standard
              input.

       -G     Output file name. Output is a binary 2-D .grd file.

       -I     x_inc  [and  optionally  y_inc] is the grid spacing. Append m to
              indicate minutes or c to indicate seconds.

       -R     west, east, south, and north specify the Region of interest.  To
              specify boundaries in degrees and minutes [and seconds], use the
              dd:mm[:ss] format. Append r if lower left and  upper  right  map
              coordinates are given instead of wesn.


OPTIONS

       -A     Aspect  ratio.  If  desired, grid anisotropy can be added to the
              equations. Enter aspect_ratio, where  dy  =  dx  /  aspect_ratio
              relates  the  grid  dimensions.  [Default  = 1 assumes isotropic
              grid.]

       -C     Convergence limit. Iteration is assumed to have  converged  when
              the  maximum absolute change in any grid value is less than con-
              vergence_limit. (Units same as data z units). [Default is scaled
              to 0.1 percent of typical gradient in input data.]

       -H     Input file(s) has Header record(s). Number of header records can
              be changed by editing  your  .gmtdefaults  file.  If  used,  GMT
              default is 1 header record.  Not used with binary data.

       -L     Without  any modifier, this option indicates that x is longitude
              and may be periodic in 360 degrees.  With optional arguments  it
              will  instead  impose limits on the output solution. llower sets
              the lower bound. lower can be the name of a grdfile  with  lower
              bound values, a fixed value, d to set to minimum input value, or
              u for unconstrained [Default].  uupper sets the upper bound  and
              can  be  the  name of a grdfile with upper bound values, a fixed
              value, d to set to maximum input value, or u  for  unconstrained
              [Default].

       -N     Number   of   iterations.  Iteration  will  cease  when  conver-
              gence_limit is reached or  when  number  of  iterations  reaches
              max_iterations. [Default is 250.]

       -Q     Suggest  grid  dimensions which have a highly composite greatest
              common factor. This allows surface to use  several  intermediate
              steps  in  the  solution,  yielding  faster run times and better
              results. The sizes suggested by -Q can be achieved  by  altering
              -R  and/or  -I.  You can recover the -R and -I you want later by
              using grdsample or grdcut on the output of surface.

       -S     Search radius. Enter search_radius in same units  as  x,y  data;
              append  m  to  indicate minutes.  This is used to initialize the
              grid before the first iteration; it is not worth the time unless
              the  grid  lattice  is  prime  and  cannot have regional stages.
              [Default = 0.0 and no search is made.]

       -T     Tension factor[s]. These must be between 0 and 1. Tension may be
              used  in  the  interior  solution (above equation, where it sup-
              presses spurious oscillations) and in  the  boundary  conditions
              (where  it tends to flatten the solution approaching the edges).
              Using zero for both values results in a minimum  curvature  sur-
              face with free edges, i.e. a natural bicubic spline.  Use -Tten-
              sion_factori to set interior tension, and  -Ttension_factorb  to
              set  boundary tension. If you do not append i or b, both will be
              set to the same value.  [Default = 0 for both gives minimum cur-
              vature solution.]

       -V     Selects verbose mode, which will send progress reports to stderr
              [Default runs "silently"].   -Vl  will  report  the  convergence
              after  each  iteration;  -V will report only after each regional
              grid is converged.

       -Z     Over-relaxation factor. This parameter is used to accelerate the
              convergence;  it is a number between 1 and 2. A value of 1 iter-
              ates the equations exactly, and will always assure  stable  con-
              vergence.  Larger  values  overestimate  the incremental changes
              during convergence, and will reach a solution more  rapidly  but
              may  become  unstable. If you use a large value for this factor,
              it is a good idea to monitor each iteration with the -Vl option.
              [Default = 1.4 converges quickly and is almost always stable.]

       -:     Toggles  between  (longitude,latitude)  and (latitude,longitude)
              input/output. [Default  is  (longitude,latitude)].   Applies  to
              geographic coordinates only.

       -bi    Selects  binary input. Append s for single precision [Default is
              double].  Append n for the  number  of  columns  in  the  binary
              file(s).  [Default is 3 input columns].


EXAMPLES

       To  grid  5  by  5  minute  gravity  block means from the ASCII data in
       hawaii_5x5.xyg, using a tension_factor = 0.25,  a  convergence_limit  =
       0.1  milligal,  writing the result to a file called hawaii_grd.grd, and
       monitoring each iteration, try:

       surface hawaii_5x5.xyg  -R198/208/18/25  -I5m  -Ghawaii_grd.grd  -T0.25
       -C0.1 -VL


BUGS

       surface  will  complain  when more than one data point is found for any
       node and suggest that you  run  blockmean,  blockmedian,  or  blockmode
       first.  If  you  did  run blockm* and still get this message it usually
       means that your grid spacing is so small that you need more decimals in
       the  output format used by blockm*. You may specify more decimal places
       by editing the parameter D_FORMAT in your .gmtdefaults  file  prior  to
       running  blockm*,  or choose binary input and/or output using single or
       double precision storage.


SEE ALSO

       blockmean(l), blockmedian(l),  blockmode(l),  gmt(l),  nearneighbor(l),
       triangulate(l)


REFERENCES

       Smith, W. H. F, and P. Wessel, 1990, Gridding with continuous curvature
       splines in tension, Geophysics, 55, 293-305.



GMT3.4.6                          1 Jan 2005                        SURFACE(l)

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