--- license: mit language: - en - zh metrics: - accuracy tags: - climate --- # OpenCastKit: an open-source solutions of global data-driven high-resolution weather forecasting This is an open-source solutions of global data-driven high-resolution weather forecasting, implemented and improved by [High-Flyer AI](https://www.high-flyer.cn/). It can compare with the ECMWF Integrated Forecasting System (IFS). See also: [Github repository](https://github.com/HFAiLab/OpenCastKit) and [High-flyer AI's blog](https://www.high-flyer.cn/blog/opencast/) Several cases: ![Typhoon track comparison](./pic/wind_small.gif) ![Water vapour comparison](./pic/precipitation_small.gif) For more cases about FourCastNet/GraphCast prediction, please have a look at [HF-Earth](https://www.high-flyer.cn/hf-earth/), a daily updated demo released by [High-Flyer AI](https://www.high-flyer.cn/en/). ## Inference ### FourCastNet You can load the weights `backbone.pt` and `precipitation.pt` to generate weather predictions, as shown in the following pseudocode. The complete code is released at `./infer2img.py`. ```python import xarray as xr import cartopy.crs as ccrs from afnonet import AFNONet # download the code from https://github.com/HFAiLab/OpenCastKit/blob/master/model/afnonet.py backbone_model = AFNONet(img_size=[720, 1440], in_chans=20, out_chans=20, norm_layer=partial(nn.LayerNorm, eps=1e-6)) backbone_model.load('./weights/fourcastnet/backbone.pt') precip_model = AFNONet(img_size=[720, 1440], in_chans=20, out_chans=1, norm_layer=partial(nn.LayerNorm, eps=1e-6)) precip_model.load('./weights/fourcastnet/precipitation.pt') input_x = get_data('2023-01-01 00:00:00') pred_x = backbone_model(input_x) # input Xt, output Xt+1 pred_p = precip_model(pred_x) # input Xt+1, output Pt+1 plot_data = xr.Dataset([pred_x, pred_p]) ax = plt.axes(projection=ccrs.PlateCarree()) plot_data.plot(ax=ax, transform=ccrs.PlateCarree(), add_colorbar=False, add_labels=False, rasterized=True) ax.coastlines(resolution='110m') plt.savefig('img.png') ``` FourCastNet can predict 7 surface variables, plus 5 atmospheric variables at each of 3 or 4 pressure levels, for 21 variables total. The details of these variables follow the [paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/2202.11214).