• Shopping Cart
    There are no items in your cart

EN ISO 19141:2009

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Geographic information - Schema for moving features (ISO 19141:2008)

Published date

05-08-2009

Sorry this product is not available in your region.

Introduction
1 Scope
2 Conformance
3 Normative references
4 Terms, definitions, and abbreviated terms
5 Package - Moving Features
6 Package - Geometry Types
7 Package - Prism Geometry
8 Moving features in application schemas
Annex A (normative) - Abstract test suite
Annex B (informative) - UML Notation
Annex C (informative) - Interpolating between orientations
Bibliography

ISO 19141:2008 defines a method to describe the geometry of a feature that moves as a rigid body. Such movement has the following characteristics.The feature moves within any domain composed of spatial objects as specified in ISO 19107.The feature may move along a planned route, but it may deviate from the planned route.Motion may be influenced by physical forces, such as orbital, gravitational, or inertial forces.Motion of a feature may influence or be influenced by other features, for example:The moving feature might follow a predefined route (e.g. road), perhaps part of a network, and might change routes at known points (e.g. bus stops, waypoints).Two or more moving features may be “pulled” together or pushed apart (e.g. an airplane will be refuelled during flight, a predator detects and tracks a prey, refugee groups join forces).Two or more moving features may be constrained to maintain a given spatial relationship for some period (e.g. tractor and trailer, convoy).ISO 19141:2008 does not address other types of change to the feature. Examples of changes that are not adressed include the following:The deformation of features.The succession of either features or their associations.The change of non-spatial attributes of features.The feature's geometric representation cannot be embedded in a geometric complex that contains the geometric representations of other features, since this would require the other features' representations to be updated as the feature moves.Because ISO 19141:2008 is concerned with the geometric description of feature movement, it does not specify a mechanism for describing feature motion in terms of geographic identifiers. This is done, in part, in ISO 19133.

Committee
CEN/TC 287
DocumentType
Standard
PublisherName
Comite Europeen de Normalisation
Status
Current

ISO 19109:2015 Geographic information Rules for application schema
ISO 19108:2002 Geographic information Temporal schema
ISO 19111:2007 Geographic information Spatial referencing by coordinates
ISO 19110:2016 Geographic information Methodology for feature cataloguing
ISO/IEC 19501:2005 Information technology — Open Distributed Processing — Unified Modeling Language (UML) Version 1.4.2
ISO 19101:2002 Geographic information Reference model
ISO 19133:2005 Geographic information Location-based services Tracking and navigation
ISO 19107:2003 Geographic information Spatial schema
ISO/TS 19103:2005 Geographic information Conceptual schema language
ISO 19123:2005 Geographic information — Schema for coverage geometry and functions

Access your standards online with a subscription

Features

  • Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.

  • Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.

  • Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.