When performing a Euclidean distance analysis What does the output raster represent?

When performing a Euclidean distance analysis What does the output raster represent?

The Euclidean distance output raster contains the measured distance from every cell to the nearest source. The distances are measured as the crow flies (Euclidean distance) in the projection units of the raster, such as feet or meters and are computed from cell center to cell center.

Where is the Euclidean distance tool?

Euclidean distance is calculated from the center of the source cell to the center of each of the surrounding cells. True Euclidean distance is calculated in each of the distance tools.

What kind of raster is the Euclidean distance?

The output raster is of integer type. The output Euclidean distance raster. The distance raster identifies, for each cell, the Euclidean distance to the closest source cell, set of source cells, or source location. The output raster is of floating point type.

How to create a raster surface showing the distance from?

In the Catalog window, navigate to System Toolboxes > Spatial Analyst Tools > Distance > Euclidean Distance. Select the point feature generated in Step 1 as Input raster or feature source data. Browse to the raster generated in Step 1 as Output cell size. Click the Environments button.

How is the Euclidean distance calculated in ArcGIS?

The Euclidean distance output raster. The Euclidean distance output raster contains the measured distance from every cell to the nearest source. The distances are measured as the crow flies (Euclidean distance) in the projection units of the raster, such as feet or meters, and are computed from cell center to cell center.

Which is the default value for Euclidean distance?

If an accumulative Euclidean distance value exceeds this value, the output value for the cell location will be NoData. The default distance is to the edge of the output raster. The cell size at which the output raster will be created.