For a better version of the stars vignettes see https://r-spatial.github.io/stars/articles/
Package stars
provides infrastructure for data
cubes, array data with labeled dimensions, with emphasis on arrays
where some of the dimensions relate to time and/or space.
Spatial data cubes are arrays with one or more spatial dimensions.
Raster data cubes have at least two spatial dimensions that form the
raster tesselation. Vector data cubes have at least one spatial
dimension that may for instance reflect a polygon tesselation, or a set
of point locations. Conversions between the two (rasterization,
polygonization) are provided. Vector data are represented by simple
feature geometries (packages sf
). Tidyverse methods are
provided.
The stars
package is loaded by
library(stars)
## Loading required package: abind
## Loading required package: sf
## Linking to GEOS 3.10.2, GDAL 3.4.3, PROJ 8.2.0; sf_use_s2() is TRUE
Spatiotemporal arrays are stored in objects of class
stars
; methods for class stars
currently
available are
methods(class = "stars")
## [1] $<- %in% Math Ops
## [5] [ [<- [[<- adrop
## [9] aggregate aperm as.POSIXct as.data.frame
## [13] c coerce contour cut
## [17] dim dimnames dimnames<- droplevels
## [21] filter hist image initialize
## [25] is.na merge plot predict
## [29] print show slotsFromS3 split
## [33] st_apply st_area st_as_sf st_as_sfc
## [37] st_as_stars st_bbox st_coordinates st_crop
## [41] st_crs st_crs<- st_dimensions st_dimensions<-
## [45] st_downsample st_extract st_geometry st_interpolate_aw
## [49] st_intersects st_join st_mosaic st_normalize
## [53] st_redimension st_sample st_set_bbox st_transform
## [57] st_transform_proj write_stars
## see '?methods' for accessing help and source code
(tidyverse methods are only visible after loading package
tidyverse
).
We can read a satellite image through GDAL, e.g. from a GeoTIFF file in the package:
= system.file("tif/L7_ETMs.tif", package = "stars")
tif = read_stars(tif)
x plot(x, axes = TRUE)
We see that the image is geographically referenced (has coordinate
values along axes), and that the object returned (x
) has
three dimensions called x
, y
and
band
, and has one attribute:
x## stars object with 3 dimensions and 1 attribute
## attribute(s):
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
## L7_ETMs.tif 1 54 69 68.91242 86 255
## dimension(s):
## from to offset delta refsys point values x/y
## x 1 349 288776 28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL [x]
## y 1 352 9120761 -28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL [y]
## band 1 6 NA NA NA NA NULL
Each dimension has a name; the meaning of the fields of a single dimension are:
field | meaning |
---|---|
from | the origin index (1) |
to | the final index (dim(x)[i]) |
offset | the start value for this dimension (pixel boundary), if regular |
delta | the step (pixel, cell) size for this dimension, if regular |
refsys | the reference system, or proj4string |
point | logical; whether cells refer to points, or intervals |
values | the sequence of values for this dimension (e.g., geometries), if irregular |
This means that for an index i (starting at \(i=1\)) along a certain dimension, the corresponding dimension value (coordinate, time) is \(\mbox{offset} + (i-1) \times \mbox{delta}\). This value then refers to the start (edge) of the cell or interval; in order to get the interval middle or cell centre, one needs to add half an offset.
Dimension band
is a simple sequence from 1 to 6. Since
bands refer to colors, one could put their wavelength values in the
values
field.
For this particular dataset (and most other raster datasets), we see
that offset for dimension y
is negative: this means that
consecutive array values have decreasing \(y\) values: cell indexes increase from top
to bottom, in the direction opposite to the \(y\) axis.
read_stars
reads all bands from a raster dataset, or
optionally a subset of raster datasets, into a single stars
array structure. While doing so, raster values (often UINT8 or UINT16)
are converted to double (numeric) values, and scaled back to their
original values if needed if the file encodes the scaling
parameters.
The data structure stars
is a generalisation of the
tbl_cube
found in cubelyr
; we can convert to
that by
library(cubelyr)
as.tbl_cube(x)
but this will cause a loss of certain properties (cell size, reference system, vector geometries)
x.spl = split(x, "band"))
(## stars object with 2 dimensions and 6 attributes
## attribute(s):
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
## X1 47 67 78 79.14772 89 255
## X2 32 55 66 67.57465 79 255
## X3 21 49 63 64.35886 77 255
## X4 9 52 63 59.23541 75 255
## X5 1 63 89 83.18266 112 255
## X6 1 32 60 59.97521 88 255
## dimension(s):
## from to offset delta refsys point values x/y
## x 1 349 288776 28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL [x]
## y 1 352 9120761 -28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL [y]
merge(x.spl)
## stars object with 3 dimensions and 1 attribute
## attribute(s):
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
## X1.X2.X3.X4.X5.X6 1 54 69 68.91242 86 255
## dimension(s):
## from to offset delta refsys point values
## x 1 349 288776 28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL
## y 1 352 9120761 -28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL
## attributes 1 6 NA NA NA NA X1,...,X6
## x/y
## x [x]
## y [y]
## attributes
We see that the newly created dimension lost its name, and the single
attribute got a default name. We can set attribute names with
setNames
, and dimension names and values with
st_set_dimensions
:
merge(x.spl) |>
setNames(names(x)) |>
st_set_dimensions(3, values = paste0("band", 1:6)) |>
st_set_dimensions(names = c("x", "y", "band"))
## stars object with 3 dimensions and 1 attribute
## attribute(s):
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
## L7_ETMs.tif 1 54 69 68.91242 86 255
## dimension(s):
## from to offset delta refsys point values
## x 1 349 288776 28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL
## y 1 352 9120761 -28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL
## band 1 6 NA NA NA NA band1,...,band6
## x/y
## x [x]
## y [y]
## band
Besides the tidyverse
subsetting and selection operators
explained in this vignette, we can also use
[
and [[
.
Since stars
objects are a list of array
s
with a metadata table describing dimensions, list extraction (and
assignment) works as expected:
class(x[[1]])
## [1] "array"
dim(x[[1]])
## x y band
## 349 352 6
$two = 2 * x[[1]]
x
x## stars object with 3 dimensions and 2 attributes
## attribute(s):
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
## L7_ETMs.tif 1 54 69 68.91242 86 255
## two 2 108 138 137.82484 172 510
## dimension(s):
## from to offset delta refsys point values x/y
## x 1 349 288776 28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL [x]
## y 1 352 9120761 -28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL [y]
## band 1 6 NA NA NA NA NULL
At this level, we can work with array
objects
directly.
The stars
subset operator [
works a bit
different: its
Thus,
"two", 1:10, , 2:4]
x[## stars object with 3 dimensions and 1 attribute
## attribute(s):
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
## two 36 100 116 119.7326 136 470
## dimension(s):
## from to offset delta refsys point values x/y
## x 1 10 288776 28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL [x]
## y 1 352 9120761 -28.5 SIRGAS 2000 / UTM zone 25S FALSE NULL [y]
## band 2 4 NA NA NA NA NULL
selects the second attribute, the first 10 columns (x-coordinate), all rows, and bands 2-4.
Alternatively, when [
is given a single argument of
class sf
, sfc
or bbox
,
[
will work as a crop operator:
= st_sfc(st_buffer(st_point(c(293749.5, 9115745)), 400), crs = st_crs(x))
circle plot(x[circle][, , , 1], reset = FALSE)
plot(circle, col = NA, border = 'red', add = TRUE, lwd = 2)
We can read rasters at a lower resolution when they contain so-called
overviews. For this GeoTIFF file, they were created with the
gdaladdo
utility, in particular
gdaladdo -r average L7_ETMs.tif 2 4 8 16
which adds coarse resolution versions by using the average resampling method to compute values based on blocks of pixels. These can be read by
= read_stars(tif, options = c("OVERVIEW_LEVEL=1"))
x1 = read_stars(tif, options = c("OVERVIEW_LEVEL=2"))
x2 = read_stars(tif, options = c("OVERVIEW_LEVEL=3"))
x3 dim(x1)
dim(x2)
dim(x3)
par(mfrow = c(1, 3), mar = rep(0.2, 4))
image(x1[,,,1])
image(x2[,,,1])
image(x3[,,,1])
Another example is when we read raster time series model outputs in a NetCDF file, e.g. by
system.file("nc/bcsd_obs_1999.nc", package = "stars") |>
read_stars() -> w
We see that
w
For this dataset we can see that
C
is
assigned to temperature)Alternatively, this dataset can be read using read_ncdf
,
as in
system.file("nc/bcsd_obs_1999.nc", package = "stars") |>
read_ncdf()
## no 'var' specified, using pr, tas
## other available variables:
## latitude, longitude, time
## Will return stars object with 32076 cells.
## No projection information found in nc file.
## Coordinate variable units found to be degrees,
## assuming WGS84 Lat/Lon.
## stars object with 3 dimensions and 2 attributes
## attribute(s):
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max. NA's
## pr [mm/m] 0.5900000 56.139999 81.88000 101.26433 121.07250 848.54999 7116
## tas [C] -0.4209678 8.898887 15.65763 15.48932 21.77979 29.38581 7116
## dimension(s):
## from to offset delta refsys point values x/y
## longitude 1 81 -85 0.125 WGS 84 NA NULL [x]
## latitude 1 33 33 0.125 WGS 84 NA NULL [y]
## time 1 12 NA NA POSIXct NA 1999-01-31,...,1999-12-31
The difference between read_ncdf
and
read_stars
for NetCDF files is that the former uses package
RNetCDF to directly read the NetCDF file, where the latter uses the GDAL
driver for NetCDF files.
Model data are often spread across many files. An example of a 0.25 degree grid, global daily sea surface temperature product is found here; the subset from 1981 used below was downloaded from a NOAA ftp site that is no longer available in this form. (ftp site used to be eclipse.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/OI-daily-v2/NetCDF/1981/AVHRR/).
We read the data by giving read_stars
a vector with
character names:
= c(
x "avhrr-only-v2.19810901.nc",
"avhrr-only-v2.19810902.nc",
"avhrr-only-v2.19810903.nc",
"avhrr-only-v2.19810904.nc",
"avhrr-only-v2.19810905.nc",
"avhrr-only-v2.19810906.nc",
"avhrr-only-v2.19810907.nc",
"avhrr-only-v2.19810908.nc",
"avhrr-only-v2.19810909.nc"
)# see the second vignette:
# install.packages("starsdata", repos = "http://pebesma.staff.ifgi.de", type = "source")
= system.file(paste0("netcdf/", x), package = "starsdata")
file_list y = read_stars(file_list, quiet = TRUE)) (
Next, we select sea surface temperature (sst
), and drop
the singular zlev
(depth) dimension using
adrop
:
library(dplyr)
library(abind)
<- y |> select(sst) |> adrop() z
We can now graph the sea surface temperature (SST) using
ggplot
, which needs data in a long table form, and without
units:
# convert POSIXct time to character, to please ggplot's facet_wrap()
= st_set_dimensions(z, 3, values = as.character(st_get_dimension_values(z, 3)))
z1 library(ggplot2)
library(viridis)
library(ggthemes)
ggplot() +
geom_stars(data = z1[1], alpha = 0.8, downsample = c(10, 10, 1)) +
facet_wrap("time") +
scale_fill_viridis() +
coord_equal() +
theme_map() +
theme(legend.position = "bottom") +
theme(legend.key.width = unit(2, "cm"))
We can write a stars object to disk by using
write_stars
; this used the GDAL write engine. Writing
NetCDF files without going through the GDAL interface is currently not
supported. write_stars
currently writes only a single
attribute:
write_stars(adrop(y[1]), "sst.tif")
See the explanation of merge
above to see how multiple
attributes can be merged (folded) into a dimension.
Using a curvilinear grid, taken from the example of
read_ncdf
:
= system.file("nc/test_stageiv_xyt.nc", package = "stars")
prec_file = read_ncdf(prec_file, curvilinear = c("lon", "lat"))
prec ## no 'var' specified, using Total_precipitation_surface_1_Hour_Accumulation
## other available variables:
## lat, lon, time
## Will return stars object with 236118 cells.
## No projection information found in nc file.
## Coordinate variable units found to be degrees,
## assuming WGS84 Lat/Lon.
##plot(prec) ## gives error about unique breaks
## remove NAs, zeros, and give a large number
## of breaks (used for validating in detail)
= function(x, ..., n = 22) {
qu_0_omit if (inherits(x, "units"))
= units::drop_units(na.omit(x))
x c(0, quantile(x[x > 0], seq(0, 1, length.out = n)))
}library(dplyr) # loads slice generic
##
## Attaching package: 'dplyr'
## The following objects are masked from 'package:stats':
##
## filter, lag
## The following objects are masked from 'package:base':
##
## intersect, setdiff, setequal, union
= slice(prec, index = 17, along = "time")
prec_slice plot(prec_slice, border = NA, breaks = qu_0_omit(prec_slice[[1]]), reset = FALSE)
= sf::read_sf(system.file("gpkg/nc.gpkg", package = "sf"), "nc.gpkg")
nc plot(st_geometry(nc), add = TRUE, reset = FALSE, col = NA, border = 'red')
We can now crop the grid to those cells falling in
= st_transform(nc, st_crs(prec_slice)) # datum transformation
nc plot(prec_slice[nc], border = NA, breaks = qu_0_omit(prec_slice[[1]]), reset = FALSE)
plot(st_geometry(nc), add = TRUE, reset = FALSE, col = NA, border = 'red')
The selection prec_slice[nc]
essentially calls
st_crop(prec_slice, nc)
to get a cropped selection. What
happened here is that all cells not intersecting with North Carolina
(sea) are set to NA
values. For regular grids, the extent
of the resulting stars
object is also be reduced (cropped)
by default; this can be controlled with the crop
parameter
to st_crop
and [.stars
.
Like tbl_cube
, stars
arrays have no limits
to the number of dimensions they handle. An example is the
origin-destination (OD) matrix, by time and travel mode.
We create a 5-dimensional matrix of traffic between regions, by day, by time of day, and by travel mode. Having day and time of day each as dimension is an advantage when we want to compute patterns over the day, for a certain period.
= st_read(system.file("gpkg/nc.gpkg", package="sf"))
nc ## Reading layer `nc.gpkg' from data source
## `/home/edzer/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/4.0/sf/gpkg/nc.gpkg'
## using driver `GPKG'
## Simple feature collection with 100 features and 14 fields
## Geometry type: MULTIPOLYGON
## Dimension: XY
## Bounding box: xmin: -84.32385 ymin: 33.88199 xmax: -75.45698 ymax: 36.58965
## Geodetic CRS: NAD27
= from = st_geometry(nc) # 100 polygons: O and D regions
to = c("car", "bike", "foot") # travel mode
mode = 1:100 # arbitrary
day library(units)
## udunits database from /usr/share/xml/udunits/udunits2.xml
units(day) = as_units("days since 2015-01-01")
= set_units(0:23, h) # hour of day
hour = st_dimensions(origin = from, destination = to, mode = mode, day = day, hour = hour)
dims n = dim(dims))
(## origin destination mode day hour
## 100 100 3 100 24
= array(rpois(prod(n), 10), dim = n) # simulated traffic counts
traffic st = st_as_stars(list(traffic = traffic), dimensions = dims))
(## stars object with 5 dimensions and 1 attribute
## attribute(s), summary of first 1e+05 cells:
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
## traffic 0 8 10 10.00918 12 26
## dimension(s):
## from to offset delta
## origin 1 100 NA NA
## destination 1 100 NA NA
## mode 1 3 NA NA
## day 1 100 1 [(days since 2015-01-01)] 1 [(days since 2015-01-01)]
## hour 1 24 0 [h] 1 [h]
## refsys point
## origin NAD27 FALSE
## destination NAD27 FALSE
## mode NA FALSE
## day udunits FALSE
## hour udunits FALSE
## values
## origin MULTIPOLYGON (((-81.47276 3...,...,MULTIPOLYGON (((-78.65572 3...
## destination MULTIPOLYGON (((-81.47276 3...,...,MULTIPOLYGON (((-78.65572 3...
## mode car , bike, foot
## day NULL
## hour NULL
This array contains the simple feature geometries of origin and
destination so that we can directly plot every slice without additional
table joins. If we want to represent such an array as a
tbl_cube
, the simple feature geometry dimensions need to be
replaced by indexes:
|> as.tbl_cube() st
The following demonstrates how dplyr
can filter bike
travel, and compute mean bike traffic by hour of day:
<- st |>
b as.tbl_cube() |>
filter(mode == "bike") |>
group_by(hour) |>
summarise(traffic = mean(traffic)) |>
as.data.frame()
require(ggforce) # for plotting a units variable
ggplot() +
geom_line(data = b, aes(x = hour, y = traffic))
Data cube values at point location can be extracted by
st_extract
, an example is found in vignette 7
Aggregates, such as mean, maximum or modal values can be obtained by
aggregate
. In this example we use a categorical raster, and
try to find the modal (most frequent) class within two circular
polygons:
= system.file("tif/lc.tif", package = "stars")
s = read_stars(s, proxy = FALSE) |> droplevels()
r st_point(c(3190631, 3125)) |> st_sfc(crs = st_crs(r)) |> st_buffer(25000) -> pol1
st_point(c(3233847, 21027)) |> st_sfc(crs = st_crs(r)) |> st_buffer(10000) -> pol2
if (isTRUE(dev.capabilities()$rasterImage == "yes")) {
plot(r, key.width = lcm(4), reset = FALSE, key.pos = 4)
plot(c(pol1, pol2), col = NA, border = c('yellow', 'green'), lwd = 2, add = TRUE)
}
To find the modal value, we need a function that gives back the label
corresponding to the class which is most frequent, using
table
:
= function(x) { tb = table(x); names(tb)[which.max(tb)] } f
We can then call aggregate
on the raster map, and the
set of the two circular polygons pol1
and
pol2
, and pass the function f
:
aggregate(r, c(pol1, pol2), f) |> st_as_sf()
## Simple feature collection with 2 features and 1 field
## Geometry type: POLYGON
## Dimension: XY
## Bounding box: xmin: 3165631 ymin: -21875 xmax: 3243847 ymax: 31027
## Projected CRS: Albers Conical Equal Area
## lc.tif geometry
## 1 Evergreen Forest POLYGON ((3215631 3125, 321...
## 2 Developed, Medium Intensity POLYGON ((3243847 21027, 32...