Keeping an Eye on Hurricance Florence
What do hurricanes look like from space? It depends on how you look! We have satellites, cameras and instruments all working together to give us the big picture of storms like Florence.
As the International Space Station passed over Hurricane Florence, astronauts and cameras on board got a look down into the hurricane’s eye.
Our Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission sees storms all around the planet by measuring rainfall. These measurements come from a constellation of satellites working together, including some from our partner organizations like the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA).
On Sept. 7, our GPM core observatory satellite flew over Florence, capturing a 3D image as the storm’s clouds started to break apart before reforming.
Other NOAA satellites, like GOES, gather high-resolution, detailed views of hurricanes, letting us peek into the eye of the storm.
Zooming out a bit, the Suomi-NPP satellite helps us track Hurricane Florence, and the following tropical storms, as they move closer to landfall or dissipate over the ocean.
From farther away (a million miles from Earth!), the EPIC instrument on NOAA’s DSCOVR satellite captured images of all three of these storms as they moved closer to North America.
💜 Space Force
Maria went from a Category 1 to Category 5 in 24 hours
"Currently, the Caribbean is seeing warmer sea surface temperatures - around 30 degree Celsius (86 Fahrenheit). And that's another reason for this strong hurricane season.", Andreas Friedrich
Hurricanes Do Come in Three’s
2010: Igor, Julia, and Karl
2004: The Day After Tomorrow ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
3 hurricanes threatening land simultaneously in the W Atlantic Basin. Never seen anything like this in the modern record #Irma #Jose #Katia
— Eric Blake, NHC scientist, 12:11 PM - Sep 7, 2017