geotransform
Geotransform is a term used in geographic information systems (GIS) and remote sensing to refer to the process of converting the coordinates of a raster image from its source coordinate system to a new coordinate system. This is crucial for aligning raster data with other geospatial datasets that may be in a different projection or datum. The geotransform operation essentially stretches, rotates, scales, and skews the pixels of an image so that they accurately represent real-world locations.
The process involves defining the spatial relationship between the image's pixel grid and its geographic coordinates.
There are various types of geotransformations, including affine transformations (which preserve parallelism of lines and ratios