With the Prithvi-weather-climate foundational model,
researchers will be able to support many climate applications that can be used
throughout the science community. These applications include detecting and
improving models for severe weather patterns or natural disasters such as
hurricanes. NASA’s Terra satellite acquired this image of Idalia in August
2023.
NASA Earth Observatory
By Jessica Barnett
Working together, NASA and IBM
Research have developed a new artificial intelligence model to support a
variety of weather and climate applications. The new model – known as the Prithvi-weather-climate foundational model – uses artificial intelligence (AI) in ways that
could vastly improve the resolution we’ll be able to get, opening the door to
better regional and local weather and climate models.
Foundational models are
large-scale, base models which are trained on large, unlabeled datasets and can
be fine-tuned for a variety of applications. The Prithvi-weather-climate model
is trained on a broad set of data – in this case NASA data from NASA’s Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA-2)– and then makes use of AI learning
abilities to apply patterns gleaned from the initial data across a broad range
of additional scenarios.
“Advancing NASA’s Earth science for
the benefit of humanity means delivering actionable science in ways that are
useful to people, organizations, and communities. The rapid changes we’re
witnessing on our home planet demand this strategy to meet the urgency of the
moment,” said Karen St. Germain, director of the Earth Science Division of
NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. “The NASA foundation model will help us
produce a tool that people can use: weather, seasonal and climate projections
to help inform decisions on how to prepare, respond and mitigate.”
With the Prithvi-weather-climate
model, researchers will be able to support many different climate applications
that can be used throughout the science community. These applications include
detecting and predicting severe weather patterns or natural disasters, creating
targeted forecasts based on localized observations, improving spatial
resolution on global climate simulations down to regional levels, and improving
the representation of how physical processes are included in weather and
climate models.
“These transformative AI models are
reshaping data accessibility by significantly lowering the barrier of entry to
using NASA’s scientific data,” said Kevin Murphy, NASA’s chief science data
officer, Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters. “Our open approach
to sharing these models invites the global community to explore and harness the
capabilities we’ve cultivated, ensuring that NASA’s investment enriches and
benefits all.”
Prithvi-weather-climate was
developed through an open collaboration with IBM Research, Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, and NASA, including the agency’s Interagency
Implementation and Advanced Concepts Team (IMPACT) at Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama.
Prithvi-weather-climate can capture
the complex dynamics of atmospheric physics even when there is missing
information thanks to the flexibility of the model’s architecture. This
foundational model for weather and climate can scale to both global and regional
areas without compromising resolution.
“This model is part of our overall
strategy to develop a family of AI foundation models to support NASA’s science
mission goals,” said Rahul Ramachandran, who leads IMPACT at Marshall. “These
models will augment our capabilities to draw insights from our vast archives of
Earth observations.”
Prithvi-weather-climate is part of
a larger model family– the Prithvi family– which includes models trained on
NASA’s Harmonized LandSat and Sentinel-2 data. The latest model serves as an open
collaboration in line with NASA’s open science principles to make all data
accessible and usable by communities everywhere. It will be released later this
year on Hugging Face, a machine learning and data science platform that helps
users build, deploy, and train machine learning models.
“The development of the NASA
foundation model for weather and climate is an important step towards the
democratization of NASA’s science and observation mission,” said Tsendgar Lee,
program manager for NASA’s Research and Analysis Weather Focus Area, High-End
Computing Program, and Data for Operation and Assessment. “We will continue
developing new technology for climate scenario analysis and decision
making.”
Along with IMPACT and IBM Research,
development of Prithvi-weather-climate featured significant contributions from
NASA’s Office of the Chief Science Data Officer, NASA’s Global Modeling and
Assimilation Office at Goddard Space Flight Center, Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, the University of Alabama in Huntsville, Colorado State University,
and Stanford University.
Learn more about Earth data and
previous Prithvi models:
https://www.earthdata.nasa.gov/news/impact-ibm-hls-foundation-model
Source: NASA, IBM Research to Release New AI Model for Weather, Climate - NASA Science
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