 |
Temperature anomalies during the 2020 heat wave in Siberia, which broke historical records and caused severe wildfires, among other impacts. Image Credit: Zhongwei Zhang, KIT |
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: AI vs. Physics-Based Weather Models
The Core Concept: AI-driven weather models analyze historical meteorological data to predict weather conditions rapidly, whereas traditional physics-based numerical models simulate atmospheric states utilizing fundamental physical laws. Recent research confirms that while AI models excel at standard forecasting, physics-based models remain significantly more reliable for predicting unobserved, record-breaking extreme weather events.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Purely data-driven artificial intelligence systems struggle to extrapolate beyond their training sets, causing them to systematically underestimate the intensity and frequency of unprecedented heat, cold, and wind events. Conversely, physics-based numerical models (such as HRES) rely on atmospheric physics, enabling them to calculate robust forecasts even when climatic states venture beyond historical norms.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Artificial Intelligence Models: Purely data-driven neural networks (e.g., GraphCast, Pangu-Weather, and Fuxi) that utilize historical records to predict future atmospheric patterns.
- Physics-Based Models: Classical high-resolution numerical weather prediction systems (e.g., HRES from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts) grounded in thermodynamics and fluid dynamics.
- Physics-Informed Neural Networks: Proposed hybrid architectures designed to synthesize standard AI pattern recognition with the boundary laws of fundamental physics.
- Extreme Value Statistics: Statistical methodologies recommended to enrich AI training data to better manage severe, record-breaking weather anomalies.