Advancing Climate and Weather Modeling

New AI Maps Ocean Currents Using Weather Satellites

Researchers from URI and UC San Diego develop GOFLOW to track ocean dynamics with high-resolution hourly data.

By Avantgarde News Desk··1 min read
A digital map showing colorful, swirling ocean current patterns as seen from a satellite perspective, highlighting fluid dynamics in the water.

A digital map showing colorful, swirling ocean current patterns as seen from a satellite perspective, highlighting fluid dynamics in the water.

Photo: Avantgarde News

Researchers from the University of Rhode Island, UC San Diego, and UCLA developed a new AI system called GOFLOW [1][2]. The system analyzes thermal imagery from existing weather satellites to map ocean surface currents in high detail [1][3]. This method provides hourly data on submesoscale dynamics for the first time [1].

GOFLOW works without requiring any new hardware or expensive equipment [1][2]. Scientists say this data is essential for improving climate and weather modeling [1]. The technology represents a significant step in monitoring ocean flows with unprecedented resolution [2][3].

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Avantgarde News Desk covers advancing climate and weather modeling and editorial analysis for Avantgarde News.