11

I'm looking for a way to get HAVERSINE() in BigQuery. For example, how to get the closest weather stations to an arbitrary point?

1

2 Answers 2

17

2019 update: BigQuery now has a native ST_DISTANCE() function, which is more accurate than Haversine.

For example:

#standardSQL
CREATE TEMP FUNCTION RADIANS(x FLOAT64) AS (
  ACOS(-1) * x / 180
);
CREATE TEMP FUNCTION RADIANS_TO_KM(x FLOAT64) AS (
  111.045 * 180 * x / ACOS(-1)
);
CREATE TEMP FUNCTION HAVERSINE(lat1 FLOAT64, long1 FLOAT64,
                               lat2 FLOAT64, long2 FLOAT64) AS (
  RADIANS_TO_KM(
    ACOS(COS(RADIANS(lat1)) * COS(RADIANS(lat2)) *
         COS(RADIANS(long1) - RADIANS(long2)) +
         SIN(RADIANS(lat1)) * SIN(RADIANS(lat2))))
);

SELECT
  lat,
  lon,
  name,
  HAVERSINE(40.73943, -73.99585, lat, lon) *1000 AS haversine_distance
  , ST_DISTANCE(
      ST_GEOGPOINT(-73.99585, 40.73943)
      , ST_GEOGPOINT(lon,lat)) bqgis_distance
FROM `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.stations`
WHERE lat IS NOT NULL AND lon IS NOT NULL
ORDER BY 1 DESC
LIMIT 4;

enter image description here


Using standard SQL you can define a SQL function to encapsulate the logic. For example,

#standardSQL
CREATE TEMP FUNCTION RADIANS(x FLOAT64) AS (
  ACOS(-1) * x / 180
);
CREATE TEMP FUNCTION RADIANS_TO_KM(x FLOAT64) AS (
  111.045 * 180 * x / ACOS(-1)
);
CREATE TEMP FUNCTION HAVERSINE(lat1 FLOAT64, long1 FLOAT64,
                               lat2 FLOAT64, long2 FLOAT64) AS (
  RADIANS_TO_KM(
    ACOS(COS(RADIANS(lat1)) * COS(RADIANS(lat2)) *
         COS(RADIANS(long1) - RADIANS(long2)) +
         SIN(RADIANS(lat1)) * SIN(RADIANS(lat2))))
);

SELECT
  lat,
  lon,
  name,
  HAVERSINE(40.73943, -73.99585, lat, lon) AS distance_in_km
FROM `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.stations`
WHERE lat IS NOT NULL AND lon IS NOT NULL
ORDER BY distance_in_km
LIMIT 4;
1
  • 1
    I had to add a CASE WHEN lat1 = lat2 AND long1 = long2 THEN 0 in HAVERSINE to avoid errors when computing locations that are exactly the same.
    – Tim Swast
    Jun 19, 2018 at 1:26
7

2018 update: BigQuery now supports native geo functions.

ST_DISTANCE: Returns the shortest distance in meters between two non-empty GEOGRAPHYs.

Distance between NY and Seattle:

#standardSQL
WITH geopoints AS (
  SELECT ST_GEOGPOINT(lon,lat) p, name, state
  FROM `bigquery-public-data.noaa_gsod.stations`  
)

SELECT ST_DISTANCE(
  (SELECT p FROM geopoints WHERE name='PORT AUTH DOWNTN MANHATTAN WA'),
  (SELECT p FROM geopoints WHERE name='SEATTLE')
)

3866381.55

Legacy SQL solution (standard pending):

SELECT lat, lon, name,
  (111.045 * DEGREES(ACOS(COS(RADIANS(40.73943)) * COS(RADIANS(lat)) * COS(RADIANS(-73.99585) - RADIANS(lon)) + SIN(RADIANS(40.73943)) * SIN(RADIANS(lat))))) AS distance
FROM [bigquery-public-data:noaa_gsod.stations]
HAVING distance>0
ORDER BY distance
LIMIT 4

enter image description here

(based on http://www.plumislandmedia.net/mysql/haversine-mysql-nearest-loc/)

3
  • With standard SQL you could put the logic in a SQL UDF rather than having to put it directly into the query's body. Feb 6, 2017 at 14:39
  • I know! I did a quick try, but then I was missing DEGREES() and RADIANS(). Left the query pending until I figure out the equivalent transformations, including the lack of PI(). But I'll be back :) Feb 6, 2017 at 16:43
  • By the way - this will give distance in km Aug 31, 2017 at 14:25

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