News

The National Hurricane Center is monitoring Invest 93L off Florida. Chances for development stand at 40% over the next 48 ...
The Defense Meteorological Satellite Program has been particularly important for understanding when a hurricane is about to ...
Microwave satellite data are key to capturing major changes in a hurricane’s strength, such as when a storm undergoes rapid ...
The hurricane was downgraded from a Category 4 to a Category 3 storm as it landed, with maximum sustained winds near 125 mph.
The Department of Defense says they will replace the imagery with a more advanced satellite, but hasn’t set any concrete date ...
The National Hurricane Center is watching a low-pressure area east of Bermuda for potential development as the season's first storm.
Forecasters have raised serious concerns, warning they’ll only receive about half of the data they’re used to, which they say will be problematic for tracking real-time data from satellites jointly ...
The cutoff of imagery from a critical weather satellite has been postponed by one month, according to an update by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Environmental Satellite ...
Hurricane forecasters are at risk of losing a crucial tool because of military concerns surrounding the cybersecurity of a long-shared satellite system — the latest potential cut to federal weather ...
The National Hurricane Center is watching a low-pressure area east of Bermuda for potential development as the season's first storm.
Satellite images early Friday show Saharan dust over the Florida peninsula and the eastern Gulf. The National Hurricane Center is watching a tropical wave in the central Atlantic.
The first three weeks of the Atlantic hurricane season have remained void of any tropical threats, but the National Hurricane Center is now watching a tropical disturbance in the central ...