Florida hurricane season: Science behind satellite images of tropical storm sizes
To us here on Earth, most of us never give a second thought to satellites, which may appear like small shining stars among many in the night sky – if they appear at all.
But as hurricane season approaches in Florida, satellites will get a detailed view of our planet from far away. From all the way up in orbit, the spacecrafts provide a critical tool for scientists and other officials to monitor the development of tropical storms and keep the public informed about incoming danger.
While hurricane season doesn't begin until June 1, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has already started its daily tropical outlooks – highlighting areas showing potential for tropical development within about a week's time. That means its National Hurricane Center will turn to its fleet of orbital satellites for data, which can keep an eye on tropical storms much more effectively than land-based observations alone.
First introduced in 1975, geostationary satellites have become a standard instrument for weather forecasting, especially during the Atlantic hurricane season, win runs June 1 to Nov. 30 every year. Technology has greatly improved in the decades since, enabling the satellites to relay data faster back to Earth while transmitting better quality images and storm detection details.
Geostationary satellites orbit Earth at a speed allowing them to stay fixed over the same area of the planet so they can continuously monitor a tropical storm and its development.
NOAA is responsible for the GOES satellites that are constantly monitoring Earth for weather threats.
The latest among them, the GOES-U satellite, launched in June 2024 from Kennedy Space Center near Cape Canaveral, Florida. The GOES-U satellite – Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite U – is designed to not only enable earlier storm detection, but also give forecasters more time to warn the public.
Images from the GOES satellites reach NOAA at about five-minute intervals. But the next generation of satellites the agency is planning − GeoXO − will see the forecasting capabilities improve even further.
The GOES-U satellite was due to become operational in spring 2025 after undergoing a test period in fall 2024. The last in NOAA's current series of satellites known as GOES-R − named after the first satellite of the series − the satellite is improved over previous iterations to detect not only a weather system's structure but its exact location.
Those capabilities should prove crucial during hurricane season, when GOES-U and other satellites will play a critical role in Florida's early warning system, Michael Brennan, director of the NOAA National Hurricane Center in Miami, previously told FLORIDA TODAY, a USA TODAY Network newspaper.
"Satellite imagery is our first line of defense against hurricanes," Brennan said. "It's how we monitor systems that develop, it's how we estimate how strong they are before we can fly an aircraft into them."
It's not just satellites that can monitor hurricanes from high in the sky.
NASA's International Space Station, which orbits Earth from around 250 miles high, also routinely captures imagery of tropical storms and hurricanes that provide a striking bird's-eye view.
For instance, as Hurricane Milton moved in on Florida in October 2024, the U.S space agency released photos and a timelapse video showing the eye of the storm as it churned and swirled its way toward the coast.
External cameras on the International Space Station first captured a glimpse of the gathering tempest Oct. 7 while orbiting above Florida. At the time, the Category 5 storm was packing winds of 175 mph as it moved across the Gulf of Mexico, later renamed by the U.S. government as the Gulf of America.
Contributing: Cheryl McCloud, USA TODAY Network
This article originally appeared on Florida Today: What does a hurricane look like from space? Satellites keep an eye
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fast Company
a day ago
- Fast Company
Japan's ispace fails second private moon landing attempt
A Japanese company trying to land a spacecraft on the moon Friday said that the unmanned lander is believed to have crashed into the lunar surface. The Tokyo-based private space exploration company ispace reported that its Resilience lunar lander successfully initiated its descent onto the moon, but lost communication shortly afterward. Resilience made its descent from 100 kilometers above the moon's surface to 20 kilometers normally and its main engine fired to initiate the deceleration process before ispace's connection to the spacecraft's telemetry went dark. Five hours after initiating the landing sequence and attempting to remotely reboot the craft, mission control determined that regaining the connection wasn't possible and declared an end to the mission, known as Mission 2 SMBC x HAKUTO-R Venture Moon. A crash landing upends the mission According to the company's early findings, the laser rangefinder Resilience used to calculate the distance to the surface of the moon was operating on a delay, an error that likely prevented the lander from slowing down for a successful landing. Given those findings, ispace concluded that its signature spacecraft 'likely performed a hard landing on the lunar surface.' 'Given that there is currently no prospect of a successful lunar landing, our top priority is to swiftly analyze the telemetry data we have obtained thus far and work diligently to identify the cause,' ispace CEO Takeshi Hakamada said, adding that the company would issue a detailed report on its findings. The failed lunar mission follows ispace's first attempt in 2023, which also ended with a bang. That craft, the Hakuto-R lunar lander, free-fell out of the sky for 5 kilometers before smashing into the lunar surface after onboard sensors miscalculated its altitude. The lunar south pole in the spotlight With interest in Mars on the upswing, humanity's drive to get back to the moon seemed to have waned in recent decades before a recent flurry of new lunar excitement. In 2023, India became the fourth nation to successfully land on the moon, joining the U.S., the former Soviet Union, and China. The following year, Japan joined their ranks when the country's JAXA space agency nailed a historic pinpoint landing on the moon, but pulled the feat off accidentally upside-down. For national space agencies, the spirit of scientific exploration isn't the only thing putting the moon back in focus. The moon's icy south pole is believed to house water frozen in shadowed craters, a resource that would prove invaluable for future human activity on the moon, or even as a hydration waystop for space exploration beyond it. That context is useful for understanding why manned moon missions are back on the docket for NASA, which wants to establish the first 'long-term presence' on the lunar surface and plans to put humans back on the moon in 2028, optimistically. China has its own plans to send astronauts to the moon by 2030, the first stepping stone toward its goal of establishing a lunar research station. Private partnerships power the new space race Lunar interest isn't just waxing among national space agencies. Private spaceflight companies around the globe have scrambled to get into the mix, with some like ispace sending their landers up with a ride from SpaceX rockets. Firefly Aerospace, based in Austin, Texas, made history of its own in March when its Blue Ghost lunar lander reached the lunar surface, making it the first private company to soft land on the moon. A lunar lander from Houston-based Intuitive Machines followed closely behind but touched down at an odd angle, preventing the solar panels that power it from recharging to carry out its mission objectives. Both lunar missions carried equipment for NASA through a program known as Commercial Lunar Payload Services, an initiative that will allow the agency to conduct scientific research through private moon missions. Between global powers with designs on lunar ice and a lucrative web of public-private partnerships, the moon is the next big prize in the space race – one we're going to be hearing a lot more about in the coming years.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels break seasonal records: NOAA
Atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide made history last month by climbing to their highest seasonal peak available in historical records, a team of researchers reported. For the first time ever, these levels surpassed 430 parts per million (ppm) at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii, which is considered the global benchmark site for tracking atmospheric carbon dioxide. The 430.2 ppm calculation for May marked a 3.5 ppm increase over May 2024's reading of 426.7 ppm, according to scientists from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the the University of California, San Diego, who worked together with colleagues at NOAA. 'Another year, another record,' Ralph Keeling, director of the Scripps CO2 Program, said in a statement. 'It's sad.' At an elevation of 11,141 feet above sea level, the observatory is located on the slopes of the Mauna Loa volcano and produces measurements that reflect the average state of the atmosphere for the Northern Hemisphere. Carbon dioxide, the scientists explained, acts like a blanket — trapping heat and warming the lower atmosphere, as well as altering weather patterns and fueling extreme weather events. The surge in CO2 concentrations is also contributing to acidification and causing changes in ocean chemistry that affect the survival of marine organisms, according to the researchers. A half-century of sampling at Mauna Loa, conducted by researchers at both NOAA and Scripps, have provided a baseline for tracking the increase of human-generated carbon emissions, the scientists noted. They acknowledged, however, that the station does not capture the full extent as to how carbon CO2 concentrations can vary across the planet — as stations in the Southern Hemisphere have yet to cross the 430-ppm threshold. NOAA's global sampling network, as well as 14 worldwide stations operated by the Scripps CO2 program, are also contributing to the broader planetary picture and helping identify locations of carbon sources and sinks, the researchers added. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Bryan Norcross discusses how AI will become critical forecasting tool this hurricane season
MIAMI – This year's hurricane season marks a significant turning point in weather forecasting with artificial intelligence models being integrated into the analytical toolkit of forecasters at the National Hurricane Center. While not yet part of the official consensus models, AI is poised to dramatically enhance the accuracy and efficiency of hurricane predictions, ushering in a new era of meteorological technology. "This is going to be a year where we start to really take in and evaluate some of the AI model guidance from various producers, and we're going to pull that into our systems here and evaluate it," NHC Director Michael Brennan told FOX Weather. Artificial Intelligence Among New Tech Shaping Forecasts During 2025 Hurricane Season The NHC will then compare AI model guidance to their traditional models to see how well it performs and how the agency can integrate it into its forecasting process. "They're not going be part of our official consensus or blended models this year, but we may make some additional ones on the side that we're going to test out and see how they do and perform," Brennan adds. "I think especially for track, there's a lot of promise on the AI side for some potential improvements in the near term." Brennan notes that intensity forecasting might take longer to fully mature with AI. "You have to think of them all as being in experimental mode, and I think it's important actually to distinguish between them," he said. Noaa's Goes-19 Weather Satellite Begins Operations In Orbit For years, meteorologists have relied on sophisticated forecast models that simulate atmospheric conditions through complex mathematical equations, according to FOX Weather Hurricane Specialist Bryan Norcross. These traditional models, like the American GFS and European ECMWF, require immense computational power, running for hours to produce a single forecast, Norcross said. However, a new breed of AI models, such as Google's Graphcast and the European Center's AIFS, are emerging as powerful complements. Unlike their traditional counterparts, AI models utilize pattern recognition, learning from vast datasets of past weather phenomena to predict future outcomes, according to Norcross. This approach allows them to operate with remarkable speed, generating forecasts in mere minutes. "This year is going to be the big year because now we have access and regular access, immediate access, to many different AI models," he explained. 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season Outlook According to Norcross, the regular model tries to simulate the atmosphere. The AI models don't do that and are more pattern recognition oriented. However, the speed and efficiency of AI models allow for an unprecedented number of "runs" or simulations, providing forecasters with a much broader distribution of possible outcomes, Norcross adds. This increased variability insight is crucial for understanding the potential range of a hurricane's behavior. "Because the AI models are so efficient, what you can do is you can run the AI model with exactly the same information, and then you can modify it a little bit and run it again, and you can really get a good distribution of possibilities because you don't have to use all this computer power," Norcross said. How To Watch Fox Weather Currently, NHC forecasters rely on a consensus approach, averaging the outputs of multiple traditional models to produce the most reliable forecast, Norcross adds. This consensus has consistently proven to be more accurate than any single model. "This year, the AI models are not going to be added to the consensus, but they will in the future," Norcross said. "They'll do this in the background and just see if it helps the consensus or not."Original article source: Bryan Norcross discusses how AI will become critical forecasting tool this hurricane season