The "globe", in the DGG concept, has no strict semantics, but in geodesy a so-called "
grid reference system" is a grid that divides space with precise positions relative to a
datum, that is an approximated "standard model of the
Geoid". So, in the role of Geoid, the "globe" covered by a DGG can be any of the following objects: • The
topographical surface of the Earth, when each cell of the grid has its surface-position coordinates and the elevation in relation to the
standard Geoid. Example: grid with coordinates (
φ,
λ,
z) where
z is the elevation. • A
standard Geoid surface. The z coordinate is zero for all grid, thus can be omitted, (
φ,
λ). Ancient standards, before 1687 (the Newton's Principia publication), used a "reference sphere"; in nowadays the Geoid is mathematically abstracted as
reference ellipsoid. • A
simplified Geoid: sometimes an old geodesic standard (e.g.
SAD69) or a non-geodesic surface (e. g. perfectly spherical surface) must be adopted, and will be covered by the grid. In this case, cells must be labeled with non-ambiguous way, ''(φ',λ')
, and the transformation (φ
,λ'') ⟾ ('
,') must be known. • A
projection surface. Typically the geographic coordinates (
φ,
λ) are projected (
with some distortion) onto the 2D mapping plane with 2D Cartesian coordinates (
x,
y). As a global modeling process, modern DGGs, when including projection process, tend to avoid surfaces like cylinder or a conic solids that result in discontinuities and indexing problems.
Regular polyhedra and other topological equivalents of sphere led to the most promising known options to be covered by DGGs, When working with a DGG, it is important to specify which of these options was adopted. So, the characterization of the
reference model of the globe of a DGG can be summarized by: • The recovered
object: the object type in the role of globe. If there is no projection, the object covered by the grid is the Geoid, the Earth or a sphere; else, it is the geometry class of the projection surface (e.g. a cylinder, a cube or a cone). •
Projection type: absent (no projection) or present. When present, its characterization can be summarized by the
projection's goal property (e.g. equal-area, conformal, etc.) and the class of the corrective function (e.g. trigonometric, linear, quadratic, etc.). NOTE: When the DGG is covering a projection surface, in a context of
data provenance, the metadata about its reference Geoid is also important — typically specifying its
ISO 19111's CRS value, with no confusion with the projection surface. == Types ==