A raster data model represents geographic space as a grid of cells (called pixels ). Think of it like a chessboard covering the Earth. Each square = cell / pixel Each cell contains a value That value represents information about that location Example: Elevation = 245 meters Temperature = 32°C Land use = Forest The grid is arranged in: Rows Columns This structure is called a matrix . GRID Model (Cell-Based Matrix Model) 🔹 Concept The GRID model is the most common raster structure used in GIS for spatial analysis . It is mainly used for: Continuous data (data that changes gradually) Sometimes discrete/thematic data 🔹 Structure A 2D matrix (rows × columns) Each cell stores one numeric value Integer (whole number) Float (decimal number) 🔹 Key Terminologies Cell Resolution → Size of each pixel (e.g., 30m × 30m) Spatial Resolution → Level of detail DEM (Digital Elevation Model) → Elevation grid Raster Calculator → Tool for mathematical operations Overlay Analysis → Combining mu...
In Remote Sensing and GIS, DSM, DTM, DEM, CHM, and FHM are elevation-based digital surface representations derived from LiDAR, photogrammetry, stereo satellite imagery, or radar (e.g., InSAR) . They are raster-based 3D models where each pixel stores an elevation (Z-value) relative to a vertical datum (e.g., Mean Sea Level). DEM – Digital Elevation Model Concept A Digital Elevation Model (DEM) is a generic term for a raster grid representing elevation values of the Earth's surface. It represents a continuous field surface Each pixel contains a Z-value (elevation) It may represent bare earth or surface, depending on data source Terminologies Raster resolution – spatial pixel size (e.g., 10 m, 30 m) Vertical accuracy – elevation precision (± m) Elevation datum – reference level (e.g., MSL, WGS84 ellipsoid) Grid-based terrain model Digital surface representation Important Clarification DEM is often used as an umbrella term In many datasets, DEM ≈ DTM (bare earth) Technically, DEM...