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Main Authors: Gultepe, Eren, Wang, Sen, Blomquist, Byron, Fernando, Harindra J. S., Kreidl, O. Patrick, Delene, David J., Gultepe, Ismail
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.06800
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author Gultepe, Eren
Wang, Sen
Blomquist, Byron
Fernando, Harindra J. S.
Kreidl, O. Patrick
Delene, David J.
Gultepe, Ismail
author_facet Gultepe, Eren
Wang, Sen
Blomquist, Byron
Fernando, Harindra J. S.
Kreidl, O. Patrick
Delene, David J.
Gultepe, Ismail
contents This study presents the application of generative deep learning techniques to evaluate marine fog visibility nowcasting using the FATIMA (Fog and turbulence interactions in the marine atmosphere) campaign observations collected during July 2022 in the North Atlantic in the Grand Banks area and vicinity of Sable Island (SI), northeast of Canada. The measurements were collected using the Vaisala Forward Scatter Sensor model FD70 and Weather Transmitter model WXT50, and Gill R3A ultrasonic anemometer mounted on the Research Vessel Atlantic Condor. To perform nowcasting, the time series of fog visibility (Vis), wind speed, dew point depression, and relative humidity with respect to water were preprocessed to have lagged time step features. Generative nowcasting of Vis time series for lead times of 30 and 60 minutes were performed using conditional generative adversarial networks (cGAN) regression at visibility thresholds of Vis < 1 km and < 10 km. Extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost) was used as a baseline method for comparison against cGAN. At the 30 min lead time, Vis was best predicted with cGAN at Vis < 1 km (RMSE = 0.151 km) and with XGBoost at Vis < 10 km (RMSE = 2.821 km). At the 60 min lead time, Vis was best predicted with XGBoost at Vis < 1 km (RMSE = 0.167 km) and Vis < 10 km (RMSE = 3.508 km), but the cGAN RMSE was similar to XGBoost. Despite nowcasting Vis at 30 min being quite difficult, the ability of the cGAN model to track the variation in Vis at 1 km suggests that there is potential for generative analysis of marine fog visibility using observational meteorological parameters.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2402_06800
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Generative Nowcasting of Marine Fog Visibility in the Grand Banks area and Sable Island in Canada
Gultepe, Eren
Wang, Sen
Blomquist, Byron
Fernando, Harindra J. S.
Kreidl, O. Patrick
Delene, David J.
Gultepe, Ismail
Machine Learning
Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
This study presents the application of generative deep learning techniques to evaluate marine fog visibility nowcasting using the FATIMA (Fog and turbulence interactions in the marine atmosphere) campaign observations collected during July 2022 in the North Atlantic in the Grand Banks area and vicinity of Sable Island (SI), northeast of Canada. The measurements were collected using the Vaisala Forward Scatter Sensor model FD70 and Weather Transmitter model WXT50, and Gill R3A ultrasonic anemometer mounted on the Research Vessel Atlantic Condor. To perform nowcasting, the time series of fog visibility (Vis), wind speed, dew point depression, and relative humidity with respect to water were preprocessed to have lagged time step features. Generative nowcasting of Vis time series for lead times of 30 and 60 minutes were performed using conditional generative adversarial networks (cGAN) regression at visibility thresholds of Vis < 1 km and < 10 km. Extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost) was used as a baseline method for comparison against cGAN. At the 30 min lead time, Vis was best predicted with cGAN at Vis < 1 km (RMSE = 0.151 km) and with XGBoost at Vis < 10 km (RMSE = 2.821 km). At the 60 min lead time, Vis was best predicted with XGBoost at Vis < 1 km (RMSE = 0.167 km) and Vis < 10 km (RMSE = 3.508 km), but the cGAN RMSE was similar to XGBoost. Despite nowcasting Vis at 30 min being quite difficult, the ability of the cGAN model to track the variation in Vis at 1 km suggests that there is potential for generative analysis of marine fog visibility using observational meteorological parameters.
title Generative Nowcasting of Marine Fog Visibility in the Grand Banks area and Sable Island in Canada
topic Machine Learning
Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.06800