Abstract:
Didger is a highly accurate digitizing program that will be an invaluable addition to your software library. In seconds, Didger precisely transforms points, lines, or areas from your paper maps, graphs, aerial photos, scanned raster images, imported vector files, or GeoTIFF images to a versatile digital format you can use with your other software.
Software Functionality and Uses: ... -Georeference your raster and vector files for export to other applications. -Convert your UTM data to Lat/Long or vice versa. -Create maps from multiple Digital Line Graphs. -Resample your well log data on specified intervals. -Digitize oil & gas or monitoring wells. -Digitize soil, rock-chip, or other sample locations. -Digitize contours from topo sheets, hand-drawn maps, or computer-generated maps. -Digitize from aerial or satellite photographs either onscreen or from your tablet. -Reproduce well logs or strip charts even when you don’t have the original data. -Digitize township and range lines, section lines, or claim boundaries. -Digitize owner, operator, or property boundaries. -Digitize seismic section lines with shot point locations. -Digitize stream, river, watershed boundaries, lakes, and coastal shorelines. -Map archeological sample sites. -Determine stream length, shoreline length, or watershed or lake area. -Apply Didger in medical research, such as digitizing radiation dose calculations from patient films. -Study urban growth such as expansion of residential areas. -Digitize road and street maps and obtain route distances. -Reproduce hand-drawn cross sections. -Digitize wildlife information such as animal habitats, migratory routes, and territorial boundaries. -Digitize geological rock formations, lithologic types, and faults from maps and aerial photos. -Digitize vegetation boundaries, burn areas, restoration projects, and lumbering areas. -Determine the area under a curve from a graph. -Digitize meteorological data to produce isobar maps. -Create spreadsheet files for data analysis.
Name:
GOLDEN SOFTWARE COMPANY
Phone:
303-279-1021
Fax:
303-279-0909
Email:
info at goldensoftware.com
Contact Address:
809 14th Street City:
Golden
Province or State:
Colorado
Postal Code:
80401-1866
Country:
USA
Distribution Media
Distribution_Media:
Online
Fees:
$389
Personnel
TYLER
B.
STEVENS Role:
SERF AUTHOR
Phone:
(301) 614-6898
Fax:
301-614-5268
Email:
Tyler.B.Stevens at nasa.gov
Contact Address:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Global Change Master Directory City:
Greenbelt
Province or State:
MD
Postal Code:
20771
Country:
USA
GOLDEN SOFTWARE COMPANY Role:
TECHNICAL CONTACT
Phone:
303-279-1021
Fax:
303-279-0909
Email:
info at goldensoftware.com
Contact Address:
809 14th Street City:
Golden
Province or State:
Colorado
Postal Code:
80401-1866
Country:
USA
Publications/References
1. Adriani A., T. Deshler, G.P. Gobbi, B.J. Johnson, G. Di Donfrancesco, Polar Stratospheric Clouds over McMurdo, Antarctica, During the 1991 Spring: Lidar and Particle Counter Measurements, Geophys. Res. Lett., 19, 1755-1758, 1992.
2. Adriani A., T. Deshler, G. Di Donfran-cesco, G.P. Gobbi, Polar Stratospheric Clouds and Volcanic Aerosol over McMurdo, Antarctica, ... During the 1992 spring: Lidar and Particle Counter Comparative Measurements, J. Geophys. Res. 100, No. 12D, 25, 877-25, 897, 1995.
3. Browell E.V., C.F. Butler, S. Ismail, P.A. Robinette, A.F. Carter, N.S. Higdon, O.B. Toon, M.R. Schoeberl, and A F. Tuck, Airborne Lidar Observations of Nitric Acid Aerosol Formation in the Wintertime Arctic Stratosphere: 1. Polar Stratospheric Clouds, Geophys. Res. Lett., 17, 385-388,1990.
4. Carlslaw K.S., B.P. Luo, S.L. Clegg, T. Peter, P. Brimblecombe, and P.J. Crutzen, Stratospheric Aerosol Growth and HNO3 Gas Phase Depletion from Coupled HNO3 and Water Uptake by Liquid Particles, Geophys. Res. Lett., 21, 2479-2482, 1994.
5.CIRA 1972, Cospar International Reference Atmosphere 1972, COSPAR Committee for CIRA, Akademie Verlag, Berlin,450 pp,1972.
6. Crutzen P.J. and F. Arnold, Nitric Acid Cloud Formation in the Cold Antarctic Stratosphere: A Major Cause for the Springtime "Ozone Hole", Nature, 324, 651-655, 1986.
7. Deshler T., A. Adriani, D.J. Hofmann, G.P. Gobbi, Evidence for Denitrification in the 1990 Antarctic Spring Stratosphere: 2. Lidar and Aerosol Measurements, Geophy. Res. Lett., 18, 1999-2002, 1991.
8. Di Donfrancesco G., A. Adriani, G.P. Gobbi, and F. Congeduti, Lidar Observations of Stratospheric Temperature above McMurdo Station, Antarctica, J. Atmos. Terr. Phy., 58, n.13, 1391-1399, 1996.
9. Fahey D.W., K.K. Kelly, G.V.Ferry, L.R. Poole, J.C.Wilson, D.M. Murphy, M. Loewenstein and K.R. Chan, In-situ Measurements of Total Reactive Nitrogen, Total Water and Aerosol in a Polar Stratospheric Cloud in the Antarctic, J. Geophys. Res., 94, 11299-11316, 1989.
10. Gobbi G.P.,Lidar Estimation of Stratospheric Aerosol Properties: Surface, Volume and Extinction to Backscatter Ratio, J. Geophys. Res.,100,11219-11235,1995.
11. Gobbi G.P., T. Deshler, A. Adriani, D.J. Hofmann, Evidence for Denitrification in the 1990 Antarctic Spring Stratosphere: 1. Lidar and Temperature Measurements, Geophys. Res. Lett., 18, 1995-1998, 1991.
12. Gobbi G.P. and A. Adriani, Mechanisms of formation of stratospheric clouds observed during the Antarctic late winter of 1992, Geophysi. Res. Let., 20, 1427-1430, 1993.
13. Hanson, D. R., and K. Mauersberger, Laboratory Studies of the Nitric Acid Trihydrate: Implication for the South Polar Stratosphere, Geophys. Res. Lett., 15, 855-858, 1988.
14. Hofmann D.J., T. Deshler, F. Arnold and H. Schager, Balloon Observations of Nitric Acid Aerosol Formation in the Arctic Stratosphere,: 2. Aerosol, Geophys. Res. Lett., 17, 1, 279-1, 282, 1990.
15. McCormick M.P., H.M. Steele, P. Hamill, W.P. Chu, T.J. Swissler, Polar Stratospheric Clouds Sightings by SAM II, J. Atmos. Sci., 39, 1387-1397, 1982.
16. McElroy M.B., R.J. Salawitch, S.C. Wofsy, and J.A. Logan, Reductions of Antarctic Ozone due to Synergic Interactions of Chlorine and Bromine, Nature, 321, 759-762, 1986.
17. Pueschel R.F, K.G. Snetsinger, J.K. Goodman, O.B. Toon, G.V. Ferry, V.R. Oberbeck, , J.M. Livingston, S. Verma, W. Fong, W.L. Starr and K.R. Chan, Condensed Nitrate Sulfate and Chlorine in Antarctic Stratospheric Aerosols, J. Geophys. Res., 94, 11271-11284, 1989.
18. Salomon S., R.Garcia, F.S. Rowland, and D.J. Wuebbles, On the Depletion of Antarctic Ozone, Nature, 321, 755-758, 1986.
19. Santee, M.L., W.G. Read, J.W. Waters, L. Froidevaux, G.L. Manney,D.A. Flower, R.F. Jarnot, R.S. Harwood and G.E. Peckham, Interhemispheric Differences in Polar Stratospheric HNO3, H2O, and O3, Science, 267, 849-852, 1995
20. Tabazadeh A., R.P. Turco, K. Drdla, M.Z. Jacobson, and O.B. Toon, A Study of Type I Polar Stratospheric Cloud Formation, Geophys. Res. Lett., 21, 1619-1622, 1994.
Creation and Review Dates
SERF Creation Date:
2008-08-11
SERF Last Revision Date:
2009-09-23