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crossarea

Crossarea is a term used in several domains to denote a measure derived from the interaction of two regions, objects, or signals. It is not a standardized mathematical term, and its precise meaning depends on the context.

In geometry and geographic information systems, crossarea commonly denotes the area of overlap between two planar

In three-dimensional contexts, crossarea can refer to the cross-sectional area of a body with respect to a

In data analysis and raster processing, crossarea may describe the amount of shared presence in two binary

Computationally, crossarea often reduces to calculating the area of polygon intersections when dealing with vector shapes,

Related concepts include area, intersection, cross-section, and overlap measures. Crossarea remains ambiguous without context, so explicit

regions
A
and
B,
expressed
as
crossarea(A,
B)
=
area(A
∩
B).
This
interpretation
helps
quantify
how
much
two
shapes
or
layers
share
space,
such
as
the
common
land
area
between
two
zoning
maps
or
the
overlap
between
two
land-cover
categories.
specified
direction.
Here,
it
means
the
area
of
the
intersection
of
the
object
with
a
plane
perpendicular
to
the
chosen
direction,
effectively
the
cross-section
through
the
object.
While
the
standard
term
in
this
context
is
cross-sectional
area,
some
authors
may
use
crossarea
informally
to
describe
the
same
concept.
maps,
computed
by
counting
the
grid
cells
where
both
maps
indicate
presence.
This
usage
aligns
with
measuring
overlap
in
discretized
spaces.
utilizing
polygon
clipping
or
general
intersection
algorithms.
For
raster
data,
it
corresponds
to
cell-wise
overlap
counts
multiplied
by
cell
area.
definition
is
typically
provided
in
applications
or
publications.