CELGAO-PHMar 4, 2025

Generative Modeling of Microweather Wind Velocities for Urban Air Mobility

arXiv:2503.02690v12 citationsh-index: 1Has CodeAeroConf
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

It addresses safety risks for urban air mobility by providing a computationally-efficient method to capture wind variability, though it is incremental as it builds on existing generative AI techniques.

This work tackles the problem of predicting microweather wind velocities for urban air mobility by proposing a generative modeling approach that maps regional forecasts to local measurements, demonstrating a proof of concept with a dataset from a SoDAR wind profiler and nearby weather station.

Motivated by the pursuit of safe, reliable, and weather-tolerant urban air mobility (UAM) solutions, this work proposes a generative modeling approach for characterizing microweather wind velocities. Microweather, or the weather conditions in highly localized areas, is particularly complex in urban environments owing to the chaotic and turbulent nature of wind flows. Furthermore, traditional means of assessing local wind fields are not generally viable solutions for UAM applications: 1) field measurements that would rely on permanent wind profiling systems in operational air space are not practical, 2) physics-based models that simulate fluid dynamics at a sufficiently high resolution are not computationally tractable, and 3) data-driven modeling approaches that are largely deterministic ignore the inherent variability in turbulent flows that dictates UAM reliability. Thus, advancements in predictive capabilities are needed to help mitigate the unique operational safety risks that microweather winds pose for smaller, lighter weight UAM aircraft. This work aims to model microweather wind velocities in a manner that is computationally-efficient, captures random variability, and would only require a temporary, rather than permanent, field measurement campaign. Inspired by recent breakthroughs in conditional generative AI such as text-to-image generation, the proposed approach learns a probabilistic macro-to-microweather mapping between regional weather forecasts and measured local wind velocities using generative modeling (denoising diffusion probabilistic models, flow matching, and Gaussian mixture models). A simple proof of concept was implemented using a dataset comprised of local (micro) measurements from a Sonic Detection and Ranging (SoDAR) wind profiler along with (macro) forecast data from a nearby weather station over the same time period.

Code Implementations1 repo
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