r2evans
r2evans

Reputation: 160447

rotate ggplot2 maps to arbitrary angles

Similar to ggplot2: How to rotate a graph in a specific angle?, but I don't want the image/square rotated, I'd like the data rotated within the frame.

For instance, if I start with this:

library(ggplot2)
usa <- maps::map('usa', plot=FALSE)

ggplot(as.data.frame(usa[c("x","y")]), aes(x,y)) +
  coord_quickmap() +
  geom_path()

usa map, north-up

I'd like to be able to generate this:

usa map, rotated

I wonder if this can be accomplished with CRS/projections, but I'm not smart enough on them to work with it formally/correctly.

Upvotes: 9

Views: 2348

Answers (2)

mrhellmann
mrhellmann

Reputation: 5499

edit2: Using the oblique mercator projection to rotate a map:

#crs with 45degree shift using +gamma
# lat_0 and lonc approximate centroid of US
crs_string = +proj=omerc +lat_0=36.934 +lonc=-90.849 +alpha=0 +k_0=.7 +datum=WGS84 +units=m +no_defs +gamma=45"

# states data & libraries in code chunk below
ggplot(states) +
    geom_sf() +
    geom_sf(data = x, color = 'red') +
    coord_sf(crs = crs_string, 
             xlim = c(-3172628,2201692),    #wide limits chosen for animation
             ylim = c(-1951676,2601638)) +  # set as needed
    theme_bw() +
    theme(axis.text = element_blank()) 

enter image description here

Animation of gamma from 0:360 in 10deg increments, alpha constant at 0. The artifacts are from gif compression, actual plots look like the one above labelled gamma 45. enter image description here

earlier answer: I think you can 'rotate' the plot (including graticules) by 'looking' at the earth from a different perspective by changing the projection to a Lambert azimuthal equal area and adjusting +lon_0=x in the projection string.

This should meet most of your goals, but I don't know how to get an exact rotation in degrees.

Below I've transformed the states_sf sf object manually before plotting. It may be easier to transform the plot (and all the sf data being plotted) by working with crs 4326 for the data, and adding + coord_sf(crs = "+proj=laea +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +lon_0=-140 +lat_0=40") to the end of the ggplot() + call.

library(sf)
#> Linking to GEOS 3.8.0, GDAL 3.0.4, PROJ 6.3.1
library(urbnmapr)
library(tidyverse)

# get sf of the us, remove AK & HI, 
#  transform to crs 4326 (lat & lon)
  states_sf <- get_urbn_map("states", sf = TRUE) %>%
    filter(!state_abbv %in% c('AK', 'HI')) %>%
    st_transform(4326)

  #centroid of us to 'look' at the US from directly above the center
  us_centroid <- st_union(states_sf) %>% st_centroid() %>% st_transform(4326)

  st_coordinates(us_centroid)
#>           X        Y
#> 1 -99.38208 39.39364
  
# Plots, changing the +lon_0=xxx of the projection
  p1 <- states_sf %>% 
  st_transform("+proj=laea +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +lon_0=-99.382 +lat_0=39.394") %>%
  ggplot(aes()) +
  geom_sf(fill = "black", color = "#ffffff") +
    ggtitle('US from above its centroid 39.3N 99.4W')

  p2 <- states_sf %>% 
    st_transform("+proj=laea +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +lon_0=-70 +lat_0=40") %>%
    ggplot(aes()) +
    geom_sf(fill = "black", color = "#ffffff") +
    ggtitle('US from 40N 70W')
  
  p3 <- states_sf %>% 
    st_transform("+proj=laea +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +lon_0=-50 +lat_0=40") %>%
    ggplot(aes()) +
    geom_sf(fill = "black", color = "#ffffff") +
    ggtitle('US from 40N 50W')
  
  p4 <- states_sf %>% 
    st_transform("+proj=laea +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +lon_0=-30 +lat_0=40") %>%
    ggplot(aes()) +
    geom_sf(fill = "black", color = "#ffffff") +
    ggtitle('US from 40N 30W')
  
  p5 <- states_sf %>% 
    st_transform("+proj=laea +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +lon_0=-10 +lat_0=40") %>%
    ggplot(aes()) +
    geom_sf(fill = "black", color = "#ffffff") +
    ggtitle('US from 40N 10W')
  
  p6 <- states_sf %>% 
    st_transform("+proj=laea +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +lon_0=-140 +lat_0=40") %>%
    ggplot(aes()) +
    geom_sf(fill = "black", color = "#ffffff") +
    ggtitle('US from 40N 140W')
  
 p1

 p3

 p5

 p6

Created on 2021-03-31 by the reprex package (v0.3.0)

edit:

It looks like you can get any angle with a combination of alpha and gamma when using the projection "+proj=omerc +lonc=-90 +lat_0=40 +gamma=0 +alpha=0". I don't know exactly how they relate (something to do with azimuths), but this should help visualize it:

# Basic template for rotating, keeping US map centered.
#  adjust alpha and gamma by trial & error
crs <- "+proj=omerc +lonc=90 +lat_0=40 +gamma=90 +alpha=0"
 
 states_sf %>% 
   ggplot() + 
   geom_sf(fill = 'green') +
   coord_sf(crs = crs)

enter image description here

Animation of a broader range of alpha & gamma can be found here.

Upvotes: 13

qdread
qdread

Reputation: 3953

In order to preserve the shape of the map when we rotate, we first need to transform from lat-long to a conformal coordinate system where local angles are preserved. We will use a Lambert conformal conic projection, specifically ESRI:102004 for contiguous USA. We coerce the usa object to a sf object and apply the CRS transformation.

lambert_proj4 <- '+proj=lcc +lat_1=33 +lat_2=45 +lat_0=39 +lon_0=-96 +x_0=0 +y_0=0 +ellps=GRS80 +datum=NAD83 +units=m +no_defs'

library(sf)

usa_trans <- usa %>% 
  st_as_sf %>%
  st_transform(crs = lambert_proj4)

The result looks like this:

ggplot(usa_trans) + geom_sf()

enter image description here

Next we modify the procedure in the sf documentation on affine transformations to rotate the geometry around its centroid.

The following function defines the transformation matrix.

rot = function(a) matrix(c(cos(a), sin(a), -sin(a), cos(a)), 2, 2)

Extract the geometry from the transformed object and then get the centroid. This will return ten points because there are 9 large islands included in addition to the mainland. (e.g. Long Island).

usa_geom <- st_geometry(usa_trans)
usa_centroid <- st_geometry(st_centroid(usa_trans))

Therefore we take usa_centroid[1,] which is the centroid of the mainland polygon, subtract it, apply the rotation of 45 degrees counterclockwise, and add back the centroid.

usa_rot_geom <- (usa_geom - usa_centroid[1,]) * rot(-45 * 2*pi/360) + usa_centroid[1,]

The result looks like this:

ggplot(usa_rot_geom) + geom_sf()

enter image description here

Finally if desired you can back-transform to lat-long again before plotting.

usa_rot_latlong <- usa_rot_geom %>%
  st_set_crs(lambert_proj4) %>%
  st_transform(4326) %>%
  st_as_sf

Result:

ggplot(usa_rot_latlong) + geom_sf()

enter image description here

Upvotes: 5

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