25

I have seen so many functions but it happens to work only for MySQL or Postgresql. I want the equivalent logic for PHP. I'm doing some comparisons, like I have this data that were being produced when created.

Lat: 56.130366
Long: -106.34677099999

Later on, I want to check if this coordinates will fall within a radius of another coordinates.

Lat: 57.223366
Long: -106.34675644699
radius: 100000 ( meters )

Thanks in advance!

1
  • 1
    Google "Haversine formula" or "Vincenty formula" to work out the distance between two lat/long positions
    – Mark Baker
    Sep 15, 2012 at 18:08

5 Answers 5

56

Thanks for the help. Below is an example function that takes two sets of longitude and latitude co-ordinates and returns the distance between the two.

function getDistance($latitude1, $longitude1, $latitude2, $longitude2) {  
  $earth_radius = 6371;

  $dLat = deg2rad($latitude2 - $latitude1);  
  $dLon = deg2rad($longitude2 - $longitude1);  

  $a = sin($dLat/2) * sin($dLat/2) + cos(deg2rad($latitude1)) * cos(deg2rad($latitude2)) * sin($dLon/2) * sin($dLon/2);  
  $c = 2 * asin(sqrt($a));  
  $d = $earth_radius * $c;  

  return $d;  
}

$distance = getDistance(56.130366, -106.34677099999, 57.223366, -106.34675644699);
if ($distance < 100) {
  echo "Within 100 kilometer radius";
} else {
  echo "Outside 100 kilometer radius";
}
3
  • 8
    The equivalent, but in Javascript because I spent way too long looking for this.
    – MoshMage
    Oct 4, 2016 at 14:48
  • @AamirR true that but it was totally different. I modified it and posted it as an answer. Why now? Its already been 5 years, move on buddy lol
    – Kenneth P.
    Apr 4, 2018 at 15:16
  • why earth_radius 6371?
    – Newbie 123
    Jun 12, 2021 at 1:43
9

You should use Haversine formula to compute distance between two points. You have a PHP version here.

Then just check if distance < 100000.

4
  • Good codes you got there. But the distance is really in meters or kilometers?
    – Kenneth P.
    Sep 15, 2012 at 18:24
  • It depends on the earth radius. If you use 6371 like in the code I have linked, it is kilometers :) Sep 15, 2012 at 18:30
  • I saw some algorithms using 6367 as the earth radius but most of them are 6371 does it really matters or not? anyway thanks :)
    – Kenneth P.
    Sep 15, 2012 at 18:31
  • What radius do I have to use to get the distance in meters? 6371000?
    – MrEduar
    Jul 30, 2020 at 14:01
1

This should help,

$lat_origin = 56.130366;
$long_origin = -106.34677099999;

$lat_dest = 57.223366;
$long_dest = -106.34675644699;

$radius      = 3958;      # Earth's radius (miles, convert to meters)
$deg_per_rad = 57.29578;  # Number of degrees/radian (for conversion)

$distance = ($radius * pi() * sqrt(
            ($lat_origin - $lat_dest)
            * ($lat_origin - $lat_dest)
            + cos($lat_origin / $deg_per_rad)  # Convert these to
            * cos($lat_dest / $deg_per_rad)    # radians for cos()
            * ($long_origin - $long_dest)
            * ($long_origin - $long_dest)
    ) / 180);
1
  • What is the purpose of $deg_per_rad here? Jun 29, 2019 at 6:31
1
//  Vincenty formula to calculate great circle distance between 2 locations
//      expressed as Lat/Long in KM 

function VincentyDistance($lat1,$lat2,$lon1,$lon2){ 
    $a = 6378137 - 21 * sin(lat); 
    $b = 6356752.3142; 
    $f = 1/298.257223563; 

    $p1_lat = $lat1/57.29577951; 
    $p2_lat = $lat2/57.29577951; 
    $p1_lon = $lon1/57.29577951; 
    $p2_lon = $lon2/57.29577951; 

    $L = $p2_lon - $p1_lon; 

    $U1 = atan((1-$f) * tan($p1_lat)); 
    $U2 = atan((1-$f) * tan($p2_lat)); 

    $sinU1 = sin($U1); 
    $cosU1 = cos($U1); 
    $sinU2 = sin($U2); 
    $cosU2 = cos($U2); 

    $lambda = $L; 
    $lambdaP = 2*PI; 
    $iterLimit = 20; 

    while(abs($lambda-$lambdaP) > 1e-12 && $iterLimit>0) { 
        $sinLambda = sin($lambda); 
        $cosLambda = cos($lambda); 
        $sinSigma = sqrt(($cosU2*$sinLambda) * ($cosU2*$sinLambda) + ($cosU1*$sinU2-$sinU1*$cosU2*$cosLambda) * ($cosU1*$sinU2-$sinU1*$cosU2*$cosLambda)); 

        //if ($sinSigma==0){return 0;}  // co-incident points 
        $cosSigma = $sinU1*$sinU2 + $cosU1*$cosU2*$cosLambda; 
        $sigma = atan2($sinSigma, $cosSigma); 
        $alpha = asin($cosU1 * $cosU2 * $sinLambda / $sinSigma); 
        $cosSqAlpha = cos($alpha) * cos($alpha); 
        $cos2SigmaM = $cosSigma - 2*$sinU1*$sinU2/$cosSqAlpha; 
        $C = $f/16*$cosSqAlpha*(4+$f*(4-3*$cosSqAlpha)); 
        $lambdaP = $lambda; 
        $lambda = $L + (1-$C) * $f * sin($alpha) * ($sigma + $C*$sinSigma*($cos2SigmaM+$C*$cosSigma*(-1+2*$cos2SigmaM*$cos2SigmaM))); 
    } 

    $uSq = $cosSqAlpha*($a*$a-$b*$b)/($b*$b); 
    $A = 1 + $uSq/16384*(4096+$uSq*(-768+$uSq*(320-175*$uSq))); 
    $B = $uSq/1024 * (256+$uSq*(-128+$uSq*(74-47*$uSq))); 

    $deltaSigma = $B*$sinSigma*($cos2SigmaM+$B/4*($cosSigma*(-1+2*$cos2SigmaM*$cos2SigmaM)- $B/6*$cos2SigmaM*(-3+4*$sinSigma*$sinSigma)*(-3+4*$cos2SigmaM*$cos2SigmaM))); 

    $s = $b*$A*($sigma-$deltaSigma); 
    return $s/1000; 
} 


echo VincentyDistance($lat1,$lat2,$lon1,$lon2); 
1

This function takes two sets of latitude, longitude and gives the distance between the two in the specified Unit.

function distance($lat1, $lon1, $lat2, $lon2, $unit) {
  if (($lat1 == $lat2) && ($lon1 == $lon2)) {
    return 0;
  } else {
    $theta = $lon1 - $lon2;
    $dist = sin(deg2rad($lat1)) * sin(deg2rad($lat2)) +  cos(deg2rad($lat1)) * cos(deg2rad($lat2)) * cos(deg2rad($theta));
    $dist = acos($dist);
    $dist = rad2deg($dist);
    $miles = $dist * 60 * 1.1515;
    $unit = strtoupper($unit);

    if ($unit == "K") {
      return ($miles * 1.609344);
    } else if ($unit == "N") {
      return ($miles * 0.8684);
    } else {
      return $miles;
    }
  }
}

Source: https://www.geodatasource.com/developers/php

Usage:

distance(32.9697, -96.80322, 29.46786, -98.53506, "M");

The last argument is the Unit of distance. Possible Units:

  • M for Miles
  • K for Kilometers
  • N for Nautical Miles
1
  • 1
    This could be improved a little by adding an epsilon value for checking if two points are "close enough" rather than exact same float values. Replace the lat1 === lat2 conditional with something like: if (abs($lat1 - $lat2) < 0.02 && abs($long1 - $long2) < 0.02) return 0;
    – Elly Post
    Oct 13, 2022 at 16:02

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.