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3DTCR: A Physics-Based Generative Framework for Vortex-Following 3D Reconstruction to Improve Tropical Cyclone Intensity Forecasting

arXiv cs.LG / 3/16/2026

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Key Points

  • 3DTCR is a physics-based generative framework that combines physical constraints with generative AI to reconstruct three-dimensional tropical cyclone inner-core structures.
  • It employs conditional Flow Matching (CFM), latent domain adaptation, and two-stage transfer learning, trained on six years of 3-km-resolution moving-domain WRF data for region-adaptive vortex-following reconstruction.
  • The framework improves representation of TC inner-core structure and intensity while preserving track stability, and it outperforms ECMWF-HRES in intensity prediction for lead times up to five days, with a 36.5% RMSE reduction in maximum WS10M relative to FuXi inputs.
  • By delivering high-resolution structure insights at lower computational cost, 3DTCR offers a promising avenue to enhance operational tropical cyclone forecasting.

Abstract

Tropical cyclone (TC) intensity forecasting remains challenging as current numerical and AI-based weather models fail to satisfactorily represent extreme TC structure and intensity. Although intensity time-series forecasting has achieved significant advances, it outputs intensity sequences rather than the three-dimensional inner-core fine-scale structure and physical mechanisms governing TC evolution. High-resolution numerical simulations can capture these features but remain computationally expensive and inefficient for large-scale operational applications. Here we present 3DTCR, a physics-based generative framework combining physical constraints with generative AI efficiency for 3D TC structure reconstruction. Trained on a six-year, 3-km-resolution moving-domain WRF dataset, 3DTCR enables region-adaptive vortex-following reconstruction using conditional Flow Matching(CFM), optimized via latent domain adaptation and two-stage transfer learning. The framework mitigates limitations imposed by low-resolution targets and over-smoothed forecasts, improving the representation of TC inner-core structure and intensity while maintaining track stability. Results demonstrate that 3DTCR outperforms the ECMWF high-resolution forecasting system (ECMWF-HRES) in TC intensity prediction at nearly all lead times up to 5 days and reduces the RMSE of maximum WS10M by 36.5\% relative to its FuXi inputs. These findings highlight 3DTCR as a physics-based generative framework that efficiently resolves fine-scale structures at lower computational cost, which may offer a promising avenue for improving TC intensity forecasting.