• AOL
  • MAIL
    • 10 New Ways To Exercise With Your Pet
    • DogVacay Dissects Pet Travel in the United States
    • Pet Myths Debunked: Swimming Dogs Edition
    • 13 Tips to Help Your Cat Live 99 Lives
    • Man Saves Cat From Boa Constrictor
    • Today's Funniest Photos 6-19-13
    • Hollywood's Rising Stars Who Faded Fast
    • Today's Funniest Photos 6-18-13
    • The 7 Different Types of Poker Players
    • 15 of the Greatest Game 7s Since 2000
Sign In / Register

SKYE

  • Maps & Radar
  • Storm Center
  • News
  • Living
  • Video
  • My Cities
  • °F · °C

Welcome to SKYE

the new AOL Weather
What's new on Skye

The SKYE’s Weather Experience

We have recently redesigned AOL Weather. Learn about how we changed the way you experience weather forecasts.

See What's New My Cities
x

Skye Weather+Photo

The app where life and weather come together

Available on the app store
x
Seattle, WA Cloudy 55°
Follow us:
Facebook TwitterGoogle+
  • Follow @SkyeOnAol
  • Google+

Stunning Hurricane Photos From Space

See images taken from space shuttles and the International Space Station
Related: Earth, Earth from Space, Hurricanes

By SKYE Editors Aug 08, 2012

  • NASA
    1 of 20

    Hurricane Felix

    Hurricane Felix was a massive, Category 5 storm with 165 mph winds when a crew member aboard the International Space Station took this photo. It was Sept. 3, 2007. The next day, Felix slammed into Central America's Mosquito Coast, destroying homes and threatening lives. The storm was eventually blamed for 133 deaths, including 130 in Nicaragua.

    Click through to see more hurricanes from space.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    2 of 20

    Hurricane Earl

    Hurricane Earl was hovering over northeast Puerto Rico on Aug. 30, 2010, when NASA astronaut Douglas Wheelock took this photo from the International Space Station. At the time, Earl was a Category 4 storm with an eye 17 miles wide. 

    "Hurricane Earl is gathering some serious strength," Wheelock wrote at the time. "It is incredible what a difference a day makes when you're dealing with this force of nature. Please keep a watchful eye on this one ... not sure if Earl will go quietly into the night like [Hurricane] Danielle."

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    3 of 20

    Hurricane Gordon

    A crew member aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis took this photo of Hurricane Gordon on Sept. 17, 2006. Gordon carved a meandering and destructive path from Central America through the Caribbean and across the Florida panhandle. The storm killed an estimated 1,122 people in Haiti.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    4 of 20

    Hurricane Ophelia

    A window on the International Space Station frames this striking image of Hurricane Ophelia. A crew member took the photo on Sept. 11, 2005. The storm spun its way up the U.S. East Coast and was blamed for several deaths.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    5 of 20

    Hurricane Irene 

    Hurricane Irene's winds were gusting to 120 mph on Aug. 26, 2011, when this photo was taken from the International Space Station. The Bahamas are visible in the lower left section of the photo. The panel visible in the upper center of the image is attached to the the space station.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    6 of 20

    Hurricane Emily

    Call this photo "Moon Over Emily." Hurricane Emily was spinning off Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on July 17, 2005, when the shot was taken. Tens of thousands of tourists were evacuated from Mexico's beach resorts as the storm neared. In the end, Hurricane Emily killed 17 people and caused more than $1 billion in damage.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    7 of 20

    Hurricane Wilma

    This photo captures Hurricane Wilma's giant eye on a day when the storm had winds reaching 175 mph. Wilma was the strongest hurricane in Atlantic hurricane history. On Oct. 19, 2005, when this image was captured from the International Space Station, Wilma was churning in the Caribbean about 340 miles southeast of Cozumel, Mexico. The storm was ultimately blamed for at least 62 deaths in the Caribbean and United States.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • 8 of 20

    Hurricane Bertha

    Hurricane Bertha was swirling in the central Atlantic with 85 mph winds on July 9, 1996, when this photo was taken from the International Space Station. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    9 of 20

    Hurricane Ike

    Hurricane Ike was covering more than half of Cuba in early September 2008 when this photo was taken from the International Space Station. The storm caused nearly 200 deaths, including 112 in the U.S. and 74 in Haiti.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    10 of 20

    Hurricane Earl

    This photo captures Hurricane Earl as well as part of a Russian Soyuz vehicle that was docked to the International Space Station. Earl was a Category 4 storm just north of the Virgin Islands when the image was taken. The eye of the storm can be seen on the left side of the photo.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    11 of 20

    Hurricane Irene

    On Aug. 23, 2011, when this photo was taken, Hurricane Irene was spinning near the northern Bahamas with winds pushing 120 mph.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    12 of 20

    Hurricane Ike

    This image, taken Sept. 4, 2008, from the International Space Station, captures Hurricane Ike as a Category 4 storm with winds gusting to 145 mph.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    13 of 20

    Hurricane Gordon

    This topsy-turvy photo of Hurricane Gordon was taken from the Space Shuttle Atlantis. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    14 of 20

    Hurricane Dean

    An astronaut aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour took this extraordinary photo of Hurricane Dean's swirling eye. It was Aug. 18, 2007, and the Category 4 storm was churning just south of Jamaica with winds as high as 150 mph. Before fizzling out, Dean caused at least 45 deaths across roughly 10 countries.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    15 of 20

    Hurricane Katrina

    NASA's Terra satellite captured this image of Hurricane Katrina on Aug. 28, 2005. At the time, Katrina was a Category 5 storm with 160 mph winds. Air pressure at the center of the storm measured 902 millibars, the fourth lowest on record for an Atlantic storm. Katrina covers much of the Gulf of Mexico here, from the U.S. coast to Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    16 of 20

    Hurricane Emilia

    Hurricane Emilia was swirling hundreds of miles off the southern tip of Mexico's Baja Peninsula, far out in the Pacific, when this photo was taken by NASA's Terra satellite in early July 2012. The storm never posed a threat to land. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    17 of 20

    Hurricane Hernan

    Look closely and you can see Mexico's Baja Peninsula in the center of this image, jutting down toward Hurricane Hernan. NASA's Terra satellite captured this image on Sept. 1, 2002, when Hernan was a powerful, Category 5 storm. The hurricane soon moved out to sea and weakened. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    18 of 20

    Hurricane Paloma

    At first glance, this looks like a typical image of Earth. But look closely and you can see a hurricane with a well-defined eye swirling near the Caribbean. The Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite captured the image on Nov. 7, 2008, when Hurricane Paloma was a Category 2 storm. Shortly after the image was taken, Paloma churned into the Cayman Islands and then Cuba, causing hundreds of millions of dollars in damage and one death.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    19 of 20

    Hurricane Celia

    Hurricane Celia was spinning in the Pacific with 135 mph winds in June 2010 when NASA's Aqua satellite captured this image.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    20 of 20
    Next: 25 Indelible Images from Superstorm Sandy

    Hurricane Mitch

    Hurricane Mitch was churning off Central America in late 1998 when this stunning photo was taken. The storm packed 180 mph winds and wreaked havoc in Central America, causing widespread flooding and nearly 19,000 deaths. Cholera and dengue fever outbreaks followed in the storm's wake. The hurricane also led to the loss of a 282-foot schooner operated by Windjammer Barefoot Cruises and its 30-member crew. That tragic story was recounted in the book, "The Ship and the Storm: Hurricane Mitch and the Loss of the Fantome."

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend

Comments

Add a Comment

Sign in »
*0 / 3000 Character Maximum
27

37 Comments

Filter by:
machin839

Amazing photos. The forse of nature is frighting and beautuful. I'm glad that we have the tecknology to be able to see how the stroms are created to see the beauty to destruction

June 06 2013 at 6:53 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
geomanjr

Move the entire town of New Orleans about 25 miles to the North. You will still haave some damage in a severe hurricane but not total destruction. Leave the shoreline to the fisherman

June 06 2013 at 6:19 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Sarah Miller

For God so loved the world the he gave his one and only son that whoever believes in him shall perish but have enteral life John 3:16

June 06 2013 at 6:07 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
pilypily10

I'm really scare of mother nature. God ten piedad de nosotros.

June 05 2013 at 10:15 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
miscale4

So peaceful and beautiful from space and so menacing and destructive on land.

June 05 2013 at 9:49 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Leslee

Looks like the winds of November came early.

October 29 2012 at 11:18 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Leslee's comment
Kenneth

Gordon Lightdoot.

January 11 2013 at 8:53 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Gerry Ostgarden

Big...

October 29 2012 at 8:29 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
atoka4me2

Thank god i live in Tennessee Please Pray for every one in The Hurricanes path,sounds like Mother nature is Mad again.

October 29 2012 at 3:26 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
alsky90

NASA is F'n Awesome

October 28 2012 at 8:51 PM Report abuse Permalink +1 rate up rate down Reply
claydiggs

ralph nagan drunk and hanging out in a hotel during hurricane refusing to meet with anyone. governor refuses to allow national guard into Louisiana because in her words "we're trying to get people out of the state". they had five days to plan and still had buses underwater that could've taken people AWAY from theh strom. and to make matters worse they confiscated weapons from LEGAL gun owners allowing the criminals to run amuck! now THAT"S democratic strategy and planning at it's apex - TOTALLY INCOMPETENT. so what do they do? they blame BUSH! how STUPID to blame a potus for a hurricane. the initial lines of responsibiity were 1) mayor 2) governor 3) potus. any commentary to the contrary shows just how ignorant you are!

October 26 2012 at 1:35 PM Report abuse Permalink -1 rate up rate down Reply
Load more comments

In Case You Missed It

  • Daredevil to Walk High Wire Over Grand Canyon on Live TV

    The cable will be suspended 1,500 feet above the Little Colorado River

  • Mystery on Venus: 'Super-Hurricane' Force Winds Get Stronger

    Scientists are baffled by the planet's sudden change in weather

  • Floods Close Lourdes Pilgrimage Site in Pyrenees

    Hundreds of pilgrims have been evacuated, muddy floodwater has reached the grotto

  • Today's 10 Must-See Photos: 6-19-2013

    Amazing and timely widescreen images from across the universe

  • Ancient 'Lost' City Discovered in Cambodia

    Airborne lasers produced first detailed map of the vast, buried cityscape

More on SKYE

  • 25 Awe-Inspiring Photos from 2012
  • Holding Up the Moon: 23 Ridiculously Well-Posed Photos
  • 50 Must-See Weather Photos from 2012
  • 25 Indelible Images from Superstorm Sandy
  • Stunning Aerial Photos of New York City During Sandy
  • Winners of the 2012 National Geographic Photo Contest

From:AOL

  • WATCH: Girl Meets Her Soldier Pen-Pal
  • HAPPY DAY! Man Wins Lottery Twice In 24 Hours
  • Young Dodger Fan's Grad Speech Is An Underdog's Anthem
  • Darkness and Light
  • Looking at the World With Feminist Glasses On: Interview With Sweden's Minister for Gender Equality

From: Mandatory

  • Kim Jong-Il Was Possibly More Than Just Buds With His Sushi Chef
  • These Images Are Not Photoshopped
  • This Is Probably The Closest We'll Get To Superheroes in Real Life
  • 12 Amazing Old War Photos
  • Heroic Flops: 10 Superhero Movies That Failed to Deliver

From: Pawnation

  • Family Dogs Returned After Groomer Mix-Up
  • Groomers Lose Dog, Claim Not Responsible
  • Footage of 660-lb Mako Shark Attacking Marlin Caught on Camera
  • Lost Dog Found 500 Miles Away
  • Baby Fox Asks for Help

From:Amazing Planet

  • Unique Animals Found at East Coast Methane Seep
  • How Cirrus Clouds Form — And Why It Matters
  • New Deep-Sea Fish Species Found in Antarctica
  • Science and Psychology: Why People Ignore Tornado Warnings
  • Mexican Monolith Is World's Tallest Freestanding Rock

SKYE

  • Maps & Radar
  • Storm Center
  • News
  • Living
  • Video
  • My Cities
  • Most Popular:
    • • Live: Damaging Winds, Blinding Downpours to Move South
    • • A Blast of a Find: 12 New Alaskan Volcanoes
    • • Twitter Photos Reveal Tornado Devastation in Moore, Okla.
    • • Tropical Storm Andrea Zipping up the East Coast
    • • Storms Pelt Midwest with Rain, Winds, Hail
  • Most Recent:
    • • Daredevil to Walk High Wire Over Grand Canyon on Live TV
    • • Mystery on Venus: 'Super-Hurricane' Force Winds Get Stronger
    • • Floods Close Lourdes Pilgrimage Site in Pyrenees
    • • Today's 10 Must-See Photos: 6-19-2013
    • • Ancient 'Lost' City Discovered in Cambodia
  • Follow Us

    Don't miss a single drop.

    • Follow @SkyeOnAOL
    • Google+
    Sign up here for newsletter

    Thanks! We suddenly see a newsletter in your forecast!
  • User Agreement
  • Privacy
  • Send Feedback
  • About Our Ads
  • Copyright Notice
  • Community Guidelines
  • Help & Feedback
  • About Us
  • Media/PR Inquiries

© 2013 AOL Inc. All Rights Reserved

BermanBraun