🌪️ 3D ‘X-ray’ of a hurricane with AI
Hurricane Melissa struck Jamaica and the Caribbean on Tuesday with tragic intensity, leaving thousands displaced and over 50 lives lost. With gusts over 250 kph and a 3m storm surge, Melissa was one of the three most intense storms to ever make landfall.
At the FDL Earth Systems Lab (ESLab.ai) in partnership with ESA, Google NVIDIA and SCAN computers, we’ve been researching how we can use #AI to better understand the structure of tropical cyclones, particularly at the key ‘intensification moment’.
Why does this help forecasters? If a storm suddenly intensifies, it can catch thousands unprepared. But false positives, when warnings don’t come to pass, can create complacency.
Accurately forecasting how a storm might behave at landfall is a key challenge in weather forecasting..
This 3D tomographic nowcast of hurricane Melissa on 27 October 2025 highlights the storm’s inner dynamics eight hours before it made landfall in Jamaica. The eye is perfectly defined, the eyewall nearly circular, which are textbook signs of a Category 5 hurricane at peak intensity. The volumetric model reveals the intense water content (measured in density, droplet size and ice water content) sweeping towards Jamaica on the east side of the eye - carrying a year’s worth of rain (about 750mm).