Making a Raster Showing Straight-Line Distances to a Single Place
In the following steps, you will see how ArcMap Spatial Analyst makes a raster of Euclidean (straight-line) distances from each cell to a single “source” cell.
____ 1. Start a new blank map. From Customize > Extensions make sure the Spatial Analyst box is checked.
____ 2. Click the Add Data button. In the Add Data dialog box, navigate to the shapefile Square_grid.shp (it’s in
___IGIS-Arc_YourInitials\Spatial_Analyst_Data\Proximity_Data_SA)
and add it to the map. Make the lines of the shapefile bright red. Save the map as Proximity_startup.mxd, in
___IGIS-Arc_YourInitials\Spatial_Analyst_Data\Proximity_Data_SA
Note that “Square_Grid” appears as a 10 by 10 matrix of transparent squares. Each square is 10 units (say the units are kilometers) on a side, so the square represents a space 100 square kilometers. Square_Grid will serve as a backdrop for the next several raster datasets. You will work in your folder Spatial_Analyst_Data\Proximity_Data_SA and with the file geodatabase Prox-Exp.gdb (named for Proximity Experiments).
____ 3. Bring up the ArcCatalog tree. Navigate to
___IGIS-Arc_YourInitials\Spatial_Analyst_Data\Proximity_Data_SA\Prox-Exp.gdb
file geodatabase, and drag the raster named Onecell onto the map. Onecell is a raster consisting entirely of No Data values, except for a single cell with a value of 999. Use Identify to verify this. Open, examine, and close the attribute table for Onecell. In ...

Get Introducing Geographic Information Systems with ArcGIS: A Workbook Approach to Learning GIS, 3rd Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.