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phpgoogle-mapshaversine

Haversine formula with php


I want to use this formula with php. I have a database with some values of latitute and longitude saved.

I want to find, with a certain value of latitude and longitude in input, all the distances (in km) from this point with each point in the database. To do this, I used the formula on googlemaps api:

( 6371 * acos( cos( radians(37) ) * cos( radians( lat ) ) * cos( radians( lng ) - radians(-122) ) + sin( radians(37) ) * sin( radians( lat ) ) ) )

Of course using that in php I replaced radians with deg2rad.The values 37,-122 are my values of input and lat,lng are my values in the database.

Below there is my code. The problem is that there is something wrong but I don't understand what. The value of distance is of course wrong.

//values of latitude and longitute in input (Rome - eur, IT)
$center_lat = "41.8350";
$center_lng =  "12.470";

//connection to database. it works
(..)

//to take each value in the database:
    $query = "SELECT * FROM Dati";
    $result = mysql_query($query);
    while ($row = @mysql_fetch_assoc($result)){
        $lat=$row['Lat']);
        $lng=$row['Lng']);
    $distance =( 6371 * acos((cos(deg2rad($center_lat)) ) * (cos(deg2rad($lat))) * (cos(deg2rad($lng) - deg2rad($center_lng)) )+ ((sin(deg2rad($center_lat))) * (sin(deg2rad($lat))))) );
    }

For values for example: $lat= 41.9133741000 $lng= 12.5203944000

I have the output of distance="4826.9341106926"


Solution

  • The formula you used, seems to be the arccosine instead of the haversine formula. The haversine formula is indeed more appropriate to calculate the distance on a sphere, because it is less prone to rounding errors.

    /**
     * Calculates the great-circle distance between two points, with
     * the Haversine formula.
     * @param float $latitudeFrom Latitude of start point in [deg decimal]
     * @param float $longitudeFrom Longitude of start point in [deg decimal]
     * @param float $latitudeTo Latitude of target point in [deg decimal]
     * @param float $longitudeTo Longitude of target point in [deg decimal]
     * @param float $earthRadius Mean earth radius in [m]
     * @return float Distance between points in [m] (same as earthRadius)
     */
    function haversineGreatCircleDistance(
      $latitudeFrom, $longitudeFrom, $latitudeTo, $longitudeTo, $earthRadius = 6371000)
    {
      // convert from degrees to radians
      $latFrom = deg2rad($latitudeFrom);
      $lonFrom = deg2rad($longitudeFrom);
      $latTo = deg2rad($latitudeTo);
      $lonTo = deg2rad($longitudeTo);
    
      $latDelta = $latTo - $latFrom;
      $lonDelta = $lonTo - $lonFrom;
    
      $angle = 2 * asin(sqrt(pow(sin($latDelta / 2), 2) +
        cos($latFrom) * cos($latTo) * pow(sin($lonDelta / 2), 2)));
      return $angle * $earthRadius;
    }
    

    P.S. I couldn't find an error in your code, so is it just a typo that you wrote $lat= 41.9133741000 $lat= 12.5203944000 ? Maybe you just calculated with $lat=12.5203944000 and $long=0 because you overwrote your $lat variable.

    Edit:

    Tested the code and it returned a correct result:

    $center_lat = 41.8350;
    $center_lng = 12.470;
    $lat = 41.9133741000;
    $lng = 12.5203944000;
    
    // test with your arccosine formula
    $distance =( 6371 * acos((cos(deg2rad($center_lat)) ) * (cos(deg2rad($lat))) * (cos(deg2rad($lng) - deg2rad($center_lng)) )+ ((sin(deg2rad($center_lat))) * (sin(deg2rad($lat))))) );
    print($distance); // prints 9.662174538188
    
    // test with my haversine formula
    $distance = haversineGreatCircleDistance($center_lat, $center_lng, $lat, $lng, 6371);
    print($distance); // prints 9.6621745381693