Foundation models accelerate space and climate science
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This is a podcast episode titled, Foundation models accelerate space and climate science. The summary for this episode is: <p>On AI in Action, IBM researcher Campbell Watson explains how foundation models are accelerating discovery across Earth and space science. Moving beyond traditional numerical methods, his team applies concepts from large language models to multimodal satellite data to build powerful, open-source AI systems.</p><p> </p><p>In collaboration with NASA and the European Space Agency, they have developed foundation models for Earth observation, weather and heliophysics. They are using AI for sustainability use cases, such as flood detection, biodiversity monitoring and solar flare forecasting.</p><p> </p><p>Designed for hybrid cloud environments and even deployed in orbit, these models point toward a future where AI and quantum computing unlock deeper planetary insights.</p>
DESCRIPTION
On AI in Action, IBM researcher Campbell Watson explains how foundation models are accelerating discovery across Earth and space science. Moving beyond traditional numerical methods, his team applies concepts from large language models to multimodal satellite data to build powerful, open-source AI systems.
In collaboration with NASA and the European Space Agency, they have developed foundation models for Earth observation, weather and heliophysics. They are using AI for sustainability use cases, such as flood detection, biodiversity monitoring and solar flare forecasting.
Designed for hybrid cloud environments and even deployed in orbit, these models point toward a future where AI and quantum computing unlock deeper planetary insights.
Today's Host

David Levy
|Host
Today's Guests

Campbell Watson
| Senior Research Manager & Master Inventor at IBM Research
Campbell Watson is a Senior Research Manager & Master Inventor at IBM Research in New York. He leads the Climate & Sustainability research team at the T. J. Watson Research Center in New York with a focus on AI foundation models for Earth and Space with NASA.
Campbell moved to the United States in 2012 for a postdoc position at Yale University where he studied clouds physics over Dominica and gravity waves over New Zealand. He received a PhD in Atmospheric Science from The University of Melbourne in Australia.
Campbell's LinkedIn 






