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NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick captured this photo of Hurricane Beryl in the Caribbean on July 1, 2024, while aboard the @ISS. NASA studies hurricanes from space through photos like this one, as well as observations from satellites. Hurricane first responders use this data, as well as scientists who want to understand how climate change impacts hurricanes. Hurricanes, typhoons, and cyclones are all the same type of storm – tropical cyclones – and they all form the same way. When warm, moist air over the ocean rises upward from near the surface, an area of lower air pressure is created. Air from surrounding areas with higher air pressure pushes into the low-pressure area. That “new” air becomes warm and moist and rises, too. As the air rises, though, it cools off and creates clouds. The whole system of clouds and wind spins and grows, fed by the ocean’s heat and water evaporating from the surface. The distinctive “eye” of the storm is made by the system turning faster and faster. Tropical cyclones are categorized from 1-5 based on wind speed. For example, a Category 1 hurricane has winds of 74-95 mph (119-153 kph). A Category 4 hurricane, like Hurricane Beryl was at the time this image was captured, has winds of 130-156 mph (209-251 kph). Image description: A view of Hurricane Beryl from the International Space Station. The hurricane is a big white circle of clouds, with spiral arms visible at far right and bottom middle. The surrounding water is various shades of blue: lighter blue at the top and deeper blue at the bottom of the photo. Earth’s curve is visible in the back, up against the darkness of space. Credit: NASA/Matthew Dominick #NASA #SpaceStation #Hurricane #Beryl #TropicalCyclone

07.03 05:19

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