News

One study, published in February in the journal Environmental Research Letters, found that a plume of hot freshwater, ...
The U.S. Department of Defense will now continue sharing key data collected by three weather satellites that help forecasters ...
Louisiana meteorologists and weather experts criticized the decision to cut the satellites and joined others across the ...
Satellite data allows meteorologists to keep track of the location, structure and intensity of severe weather, helping to ...
“Many of the factors we identified ahead of the season are still at play, and conditions are largely tracking along with our May predictions,” wrote Matt Rosencrans, lead hurricane season forecaster ...
Top experts from Colorado State University are still maintaining their prediction of a slightly above-average season.
Microwave data from a trio of defense department satellites will continue flowing to NOAA to help inform sea ice research and ...
Forecasters say Tropical Storm Gil has become a hurricane in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The U.S. National Hurricane Center ...
The Pentagon has reversed course and will continue to provide satellite weather data that hurricane forecasters deem essential, at least through September 2026. Previously, the Navy had planned to cut ...
Weather satellites operated by the U.S. Department of Defense will stop delivering data to NOAA on July 31. Here’s why and how it will change storm and hurricane forecasting.
The Defense Meteorological Satellite Program’s microwave data gives key information that can’t be gleaned from conventional satellites. That includes three-dimensional details of a storm, what ...
Even with preparation, few weather models predicted Hurricane Helene would hook so far into Appalachia with its deadly rains ...