PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

SwRI scientist leads science team contributions to a new NASA heliophysics AI foundation model

Program creates visual AI model trained on massive amounts of solar data

2025-08-26
(Press-News.org) SAN ANTONIO — August 26, 2025 — NASA has launched Surya, its new heliophysics artificial intelligence foundation model to empower solar scientists with tools to enhance research and space weather forecasting. Southwest Research Institute’s Dr. Andrés Muñoz-Jaramillo led a team of scientists from several institutions and universities who played a crucial role in tailoring the scientific data and validating a powerful application to predict solar activity such as coronal mass ejections and other space weather events.

“Surya is like the visual GPT (generative pretrained transformer) for heliophysics,” said Muñoz-Jaramillo, a solar scientist fluent in project leadership and machine learning. He works in SwRI’s Solar System Science and Exploration Division in Boulder, Colorado. “We trained the model using vast amounts of high-resolution Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) data. This beautiful imagery reveals the activity of the Sun and provides insight into the underlying physics creating it.”

NASA’s SDO is designed to understand the causes of solar variability and its impacts on Earth by studying the solar atmosphere on small scales of space and time and in many wavelengths simultaneously. Developed by NASA in partnership with IBM and others, Surya is an important step forward in helping predict space weather, which can severely affect power, communication, aviation and agricultural operations.

“The Sun contains a variety of structures, all governed by the same basic yet complex physics,” Muñoz-Jaramillo said. “If you look at a movie of the Sun, you start recognizing elements such as active regions that are bright in ultraviolet or dark in visible light. You see loops and coronal holes. These structures repeat because they are produced by the same physics. With Surya, we are training an AI model to learn the visual language of the Sun, to establish relationships between various structures to better understand the overall solar environment.”

For the last 15 years, SDO has been continuously collecting high-resolution data using three instruments across multiple wavelengths to better understand solar activity and its effect on space weather. The only feasible way to truly exploit such massive data is with AI models. NASA is encouraging the science and applications community to test and explore this AI model for innovative solutions that leverage the unique value of continuous, stable, long-duration datasets.

Surya is part of NASA’s Chief Science Data Officer’s 5+1 strategy for AI, building foundation models for each science division, plus one large language model tying them together to accelerate discovery and decision-making. NASA’s Interagency Implementation and Advanced Concepts Team (IMPACT) AI under the Office of Data Science and Informatics at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, jointly developed Surya’s AI architecture with IBM and a collaborative science team.

“We are advancing data-driven science by embedding NASA’s deep scientific expertise into cutting-edge AI models,” said Kevin Murphy, chief science data officer at NASA Headquarters in Washington, in a NASA article. “By developing a foundation model trained on NASA’s heliophysics data, we’re making it easier to analyze the complexities of the Sun’s behavior with unprecedented speed and precision.”

“The 12 members of the science team developed performance metrics, while the overall Surya team leveraged the experience of building IMPACT AI’s first foundation model for Earth science data, focused on satellite imagery about climate and landmasses,” Muñoz-Jaramillo said. “Improving on the first model, the heliophysics model included scientists at every step in the development process, as well as changing the task used to teach the model from filling gaps to predicting the future.”

The system was trained using nine years’ worth of data from SDO’s Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) instrument. The science team enhanced full resolution data, correcting for instrument degradation or other data anomalies, while ensuring that it was temporally and spatially aligned.

“Surya uses transformer AI model architecture to revolutionize and add meaning to the data,” Muñoz-Jaramillo said.

The goal is to determine how the Sun’s magnetic field is generated and structured and how its stored magnetic energy is converted and released into the heliosphere and geospace in the form of solar wind, energetic particles and variations in the solar irradiance.

Ultimately, Surya could be extended beyond solar imagery to incorporate magnetograms, irradiance, and other heliophysics datasets — laying the foundation for a unified AI model of the Sun–heliosphere system.

“Translating the visual language may be kind of like translating a GPT from Spanish to Portuguese, languages that are very similar,” Muñoz-Jaramillo said. “It requires work, but it can be done.”

The science team, assembled by NASA Headquarters, included experts from SwRI; the University of Alabama in Huntsville; the University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado; Georgia State University in Atlanta; Princeton University in New Jersey; NASA’s SMD’s Heliophysics Division; NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland; NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California; and the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California.

NASA is providing open access to the model and the code.

For more information, visit https://www.swri.org/markets/earth-space/space-research-technology/space-science/heliophysics.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Could routine eye exams reveal early signs of Alzheimer’s?

2025-08-26
Within the next few years, doctors may be able to spot signs of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias using routine eye exams well before symptoms appear, a new study suggests. The research, recently published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia, links abnormal changes in the tiny blood vessels of the retinas of mice with a common genetic mutation known to increase Alzheimer’s disease risk. The findings build on previous work from the same group at The Jackson Laboratory (JAX), which found similar vascular changes in mice’s brains and linked abnormalities in specific retinal cells to early ...

Parental liver disease death more than doubles risk of alcohol-associated hepatitis in next generation

2025-08-26
INDIANAPOLIS -- In a groundbreaking study, research scientists from the Indiana University School of Medicine and Regenstrief Institute found that individuals with a parent who died from liver disease face more than double the risk of developing alcohol-associated hepatitis, one of the deadliest forms of alcohol-related liver disease, compared with similar heavy drinkers without that family history. Researchers investigated the impact of parental liver disease mortality on both the development and outcomes of alcohol-associated hepatitis in adult children. In the U.S., nearly 20,000 people die from alcoholic liver disease each year, according to the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug ...

Shared gene signatures and key mechanisms in the progression from liver cirrhosis to acute-on-chronic liver failure

2025-08-26
Background and objectives Chronic liver cirrhosis (LC) and acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) are interconnected hepatic disorders associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. Despite their distinct clinical characteristics, both conditions share common pathogenic pathways that remain inadequately understood. This study aimed to identify shared gene signatures and elucidate underlying molecular mechanisms. Methods In this study, we employed Weighted Gene Co-Expression Network Analysis to explore transcriptomic ...

Rural Health Care Outcomes Accelerator extended to 2028

2025-08-26
DALLAS, August 26, 2025 — Research shows that rural Americans are at 30% higher risk of stroke, are 40% more likely to develop heart disease and live an average of three years fewer than their urban counterparts.[1] The American Heart Association, devoted to changing the future to a world of healthier lives for all, is committed to closing the gap between rural and urban health outcomes. To continue improving cardiovascular care in rural communities, the Association announced today the three-year funding extension of its Rural Health Care Outcomes Accelerator through June 2028. Since its launch in ...

Feeling good about yourself

2025-08-26
Emotions are complicated things. Researchers have found some differences between men and women, but basically the same factors play the biggest part in whether we feel good about ourselves. “We investigated differences between the sexes and the relationships between factors that influence participants’ motivation and well-being,” said Professor Hermundur Sigmundsson at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU’s) Department of Psychology. He has spent many years studying what it takes for people to achieve their goals, and in this ...

People with schizophrenia have higher risk of COPD

2025-08-26
Miami (August 26, 2025) – People with schizophrenia are more likely to develop chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), suggesting a possible syndemic relationship between the two diseases, in addition to people not seeking appropriate medical care. A new article examining the link between COPD and schizophrenia appears in the July 2025 issue of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases: Journal of the COPD Foundation, a peer-reviewed, open access journal. COPD encompasses conditions including emphysema and ...

Sibling-specific aggression in women and girls

2025-08-26
Human men are typically more aggressive than human women, a finding supported by reams of research. But surveys of  4,136 individuals in 24 countries reveal an exception to the trend: aggression in sibling relationships. Douglas T. Kenrick and Michael E.W. Warnum, along with a team of 49 colleagues, asked participants how often they had acted aggressively towards a sister, a brother, a female friend, a male friend, a female acquaintance, or a male acquaintance—both when they were children and when they were adults.  Aggressive actions included both direct aggression, such as hitting/slapping ...

Study raises red flags about BPA replacements

2025-08-26
Chemicals used to replace bisphenol A (BPA) in food packaging can trigger potentially harmful effects in human ovarian cells, according to McGill University researchers. A new study examined several chemicals commonly used in price stickers on packaged meat, fish, cheese and produce found early signs of potential toxicity. The findings, published in the journal Toxicological Sciences, raise concerns about the safety of BPA-free packaging and whether current regulations go far enough to protect consumers. BPA substitutes disrupt gene expression The research began with the 2023 discovery by Stéphane Bayen, Associate Professor in McGill’s ...

The irresistibility of extrapolating from past performance

2025-08-26
Researchers explore the human tendency to look to the past to predict the future—even when people rationally know outcomes are completely random. A fair coin flip is the prototypically random-outcome event. Russell Roberts and colleagues asked 12,000 people to predict coin flip outcomes in a sequence of five fair coin tosses—some in person, some online. With such a large number of participants, they were able to analyze subsets of people who—by chance—made a series of successful or unsuccessful guesses without any deception or manipulation of the ...

Predicting nationality from beliefs and values

2025-08-26
Different countries have different cultures, and social scientists have developed theories about which values are most important in differentiating the world’s cultures. Abhishek Sheetal and colleagues used the power of machine learning to identify the crucial distinguishing characteristics of the world’s national cultures in a theory-blind manner. The authors trained a neural network to predict an individual’s country of origin from their attitudes, values, and beliefs, as measured by the World Values Survey, a global study that probes everything from religious beliefs ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Deadly, record-breaking heatwaves will persist for 1,000 years, even under net zero

Maps created by 1960s schoolchildren provide new insights into habitat losses

Cool comfort: beating the heat with high-tech clothes

New study reveals how China can cut nitrogen pollution while safeguarding national food security

Two thirds of women experience too much or too little weight gain in pregnancy

Thousands of NHS doctors trapped in insecure “gig economy” contracts

Two thirds of women gain too much or too little weight in pregnancy: Global study

Livestock manure linked to the rapid spread of hidden antibiotic resistance threats in farmland soils

National Women’s Soccer League launches Hands-Only CPR effort, led by player Savy King

School accountability yields long-term gains for students

Half of novelists believe AI is likely to replace their work entirely, research finds

World's largest metabolomic study completed, paving way for predictive medicine

Center for Open Science awarded grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to preserve and safeguard publicly funded scientific data

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers identify genetic factors influencing bone density in pediatric patients

Trapping particles to explain lightning

Teens who play video games with gambling-like elements more likely to start real betting, study suggests

Maternal health program cuts infection deaths by 32%

Use of head CT scans in ERs more than doubles over 15 years

Open spaces in cities may be hotspots for coyote-human interaction

Focused ultrasound passes first test in treatment of pediatric brain cancer

Beef vs. plant-based meat: UT Austin study finds diet alters breast milk composition in under a week

Two new studies from Schneider Electric and the Boston University Institute for Global Sustainability reveal 95 barriers and 50 risks slowing decarbonization in the building sector

Women authors underrepresented among retracted medical papers

Is it light or humidity? Scientists identify the culprits of emerald green degradation in masterpieces

Bandage-like device brings texture to touchscreens

Rocks on faults can heal following seismic movement

Researchers find microplastics in 100 per cent of donkey faecal samples tested

New clues to why some women experience recurrent miscarriage

New data on donor selection in allogeneic stem cell transplantation – young age is gaining in importance

High blood pressure in adolescence a silent risk of atherosclerosis later in life

[Press-News.org] SwRI scientist leads science team contributions to a new NASA heliophysics AI foundation model
Program creates visual AI model trained on massive amounts of solar data