PIX4673972: Hurricane Frances seen from space - 08/2004 - Hurricane Frances seen from space. 08/2004 - Eye of Hurricane Frances seen from the International Space Station on 28/08/2004. Eye of hurricane Frances was taken by astronaut aboard the International Space Station on Aug 28, 2004 / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674031: Hurricane Dean seen from shuttle Endeavour - Close - up of the eye of hurricane Dean - Close-up of the eye of hurricane Dean seen by the crew of shuttle Endeavour August 18, 2007. 18 Aug 2007 Crewmembers on the Space Shuttle Endeavour captured this image around noon CDT of hurricane Dean in the Caribbean. At the time the shuttle and International Space Station passed overhead, the Category 4 storm was moving westerly at 17 mph nearing Jamaica carrying sustained winds of 150 mph / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674050: Hurricane Felix seen since ISS 09/2007 - Hurricane Felix seen over Grand Cayman by members of Expedition 15 of the International Space Station. September 3, 2007. This view of Hurricane Felix was taken from the Earth - orbiting International Space Station (ISS) by an Expedition 15 crewmember using a digital still camera equipped with a 28 - 70 mm lens set at 28 mm focal length on Sept. 3, 2007 at 11:38:46 GMT. The ISS was located at the nadir point of 16.9 degrees north latitude and 83.3 degrees west longitude, over the waters southwest of Grand Cayman Island. At approximately noon GMT, Hurricane Felix was near 14.2 degrees north latitude and 76.9 west longitude, about 260 miles (425 kilometers) south of Kingston Jamaica, and 425 miles (685 kilometers) east of Cabo Gracias a Dios on the Nicaragua/Honduras border, moving west at 21 miles per hour (33 kilometers per hour). The sustained winds were 165 miles per hour with higher gusts making it a category 5 on the Saffir - Simpson scale / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674052: Hurricane Felix seen since ISS 09/2007 - Hurricane Felix seen over Honduras by members of Expedition 15 of the International Space Station. September 3, 2007. This view of Hurricane Felix was taken from the Earth - orbiting International Space Station (ISS) by an Expedition 15 crewmember using a digital still camera equipped with a 28 - 70 mm lens set at 28 mm focal length on Sept. 3, 2007 at 11:38:29 GMT. The ISS was located at the nadir point of 16.0 degrees north latitude and 84.0 degrees west longitude nearly over the coast of eastern Honduras when this image was taken. At approximately noon GMT, Hurricane Felix was near 14.2 degrees north latitude and 76.9 degrees west longitude, about 260 miles (425 kilometers) south of Kingston Jamaica, and 425 miles (685 kilometers) east of Cabo Gracias a Dios on the Nicaragua/Honduras border, moving west at 21 miles per hour (33 kilometers per hour). The sustained winds were 165 miles per hour with higher gusts making it a category 5 on the Saffir - Simpson scale / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674136: Hurricane Ike seen from space - Hurricane Ike seen from space - Hurricane Ike seen over Cuba on 9 September 2008 from the International Space Station (ISS). 9 Sep. 2008 - Hurricane Ike covers more than half of Cuba in this image, photographed by the crew of ISS - 17 aboard the International Space Station from a vantage point of 220 statute miles above Earth. The center of Ike was near 22.4 degrees north latitude and 82.4 degrees west longitude and moving 290 degrees at 11.7 miles per hour. Sustained winds were at 80.6 miles per hour, with gusts to 97.9 miles per hour and were forced to strengthen as the eye moved back over the warm water in the gulf of Mexico City / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674142: Hurricane Ike seen from space - Hurricane Ike seen from space - Hurricane Ike seen over Cuba on 9 September 2008 from the International Space Station (ISS). 9 Sep. 2008 - Hurricane Ike covers more than half of Cuba in this image, photographed by the crew of ISS - 17 aboard the International Space Station from a vantage point of 220 statute miles above Earth. The center of Ike was near 22.4 degrees north latitude and 82.4 degrees west longitude and moving 290 degrees at 11.7 miles per hour. Sustained winds were at 80.6 miles per hour, with gusts to 97.9 miles per hour and were forced to strengthen as the eye moved back over the warm water in the gulf of Mexico City / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674157: Hurricane Ike seen from space - Hurricane Ike seen from space - Hurricane Ike seen over Cuba on 9 September 2008 from the International Space Station (ISS). 9 Sep. 2008 - Hurricane Ike covers more than half of Cuba in this image, photographed by the crew of ISS - 17 aboard the International Space Station from a vantage point of 220 statute miles above Earth. The center of Ike was near 22.4 degrees north latitude and 82.4 degrees west longitude and moving 290 degrees at 11.7 miles per hour. Sustained winds were at 80.6 miles per hour, with gusts to 97.9 miles per hour and were forced to strengthen as the eye moved back over the warm water in the gulf of Mexico City / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674194: Hurricane Igor seen from space - Hurricane Igor seen from space - Hurricane Igor seen from space over the Lesser Antilles on 14 September 2010 from the International Space Station (ISS). Hurricane Igor is featured in this Sept. 14 2010 image photographed by an Expedition 24 crew member on the International Space Station. At the time this image was taken, Hurricane Igor was about 648 miles east of Barbuda Island in the Lesser Antilles. It was travelling to the northeast (290 degrees) at 6.2 mph. The winds were already 132.5 mph gusting to 161.3 mph and forecast to intensify. Igor's well - defined eye was a dynamic area of swift rising winds in the outer wall and sinking winds in the center. His strong eye wall surrounded a low level cloud deck of clouds containing additional vortices / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674202: Hurricane Igor seen from space - Hurricane Igor seen from space - Hurricane Igor seen from space over the Lesser Antilles on 14 September 2010 from the International Space Station (ISS). Hurricane Igor is featured in this Sept. 14 2010 image photographed by an Expedition 24 crew member on the International Space Station. At the time this image was taken, Hurricane Igor was about 648 miles east of Barbuda Island in the Lesser Antilles. It was travelling to the northeast (290 degrees) at 6.2 mph. The winds were already 132.5 mph gusting to 161.3 mph and forecast to intensify. Igor's well - defined eye was a dynamic area of swift rising winds in the outer wall and sinking winds in the center. His strong eye wall surrounded a low level cloud deck of clouds containing additional vortices / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674208: Hurricane Igor seen from space - Hurricane Igor seen from space - Hurricane Igor seen from space over the Lesser Antilles on 14 September 2010 from the International Space Station (ISS). Hurricane Igor is featured in this Sept. 14 2010 image photographed by an Expedition 24 crew member on the International Space Station. At the time this image was taken, Hurricane Igor was about 648 miles east of Barbuda Island in the Lesser Antilles. It was travelling to the northeast (290 degrees) at 6.2 mph. The winds were already 132.5 mph gusting to 161.3 mph and forecast to intensify. Igor's well - defined eye was a dynamic area of swift rising winds in the outer wall and sinking winds in the center. His strong eye wall surrounded a low level cloud deck of clouds containing additional vortices / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674348: Cyclone Debbie over Australia - March 2017 - Cyclone Debbie above Australia - Cyclone Debbie over Queensland seen by Sentinel-3A satellite on 27 March 2017. The Copernicus Sentinel-3A satellite's Ocean and Land Colour Instrument captured Cyclone Debbie as it struck eastern Australia on 27 March 2017 / Bridgeman Images
PIX4674357: Hurricane Ophelia - 10/2017 - Hurricane Ophelia 10/2017: Hurricane Ophelia seen over Ireland on 16 October 2017 by Terra satellite. Hurricane Ophelia weakened and devolved into a post-tropical cyclone on the evening of October 15, 2017. However, the storm maintained enough strength to deliver destructive winds and rain to Ireland and the United Kingdom the next day. The Terra satellite captured this image of Ophelia at 12:55 p.m. local time (11:55 Universal Time) on October 16, 2017 / Bridgeman Images