Skip to main content

Hurricane Laura captured in space station photos as it hits Gulf Coast

Communities along the Gulf Coast are about to experience the worst of Hurricane Laura, a weather system that’s strengthened from a Category 1 storm to a Category 4 in the space of just 15 hours.

The huge size of the dangerous hurricane was captured in a set of dramatic images taken by American astronaut Chris Cassidy aboard the International Space Station 250 miles above Earth on Wednesday, August 26.

Recommended Videos

https://twitter.com/Astro_SEAL/status/1298703689960443904

Laura is packing winds of up to 145 mph just ahead of making landfall, with the National Hurricane Center warning that the storm could cause “unsurvivable” storm surges, overwhelming flood defenses from eastern Texas to Louisiana.

Officials in the two states have issued evacuation orders for as many as half a million residents, a process that’s been made more complicated by coronavirus concerns.

For up-to-date information on the storm’s progression, people are advised to check local TV and radio broadcasts, while these apps and web services can also help.

Space station vantage point

Well above any weather systems but close enough to see them in detail, the space station offers an incredible vantage point for astronauts on board the orbiting outpost. NASA’s Chris Cassidy has been capturing dramatic images of recent storms as they bear down on various parts of the Americas, last week posting several pictures of Hurricane Genevieve as the extreme weather system came close to the Baja California peninsula.

Several years back, British astronaut Tim Peake revealed the camera kit that allows the space station crew to capture their amazing images of Earth. It includes five Nikon D4 bodies, as well as numerous lenses such as a Nikkor 14-24mm, f2.8; Nikkor 28mm, f1.4; Sigma 50-500mm, f4.5-6.3; Nikkor 400mm, f2.8; and Nikkor 800mm, f5.6.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
This rocket-launch photo is unlike any you’ve seen before
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket visible as a streak of light from bottom right to top left.

Blue Origin launched its New Glenn heavy-lift rocket for the first time last week, and news sites and social media feeds were quick to share dramatic images of the 98-meter-tall rocket heading toward the heavens.

At the same time, NASA astronaut Don Pettit captured the launch in a long exposure from the International Space Station (ISS) some 250 miles above Earth. The result is a rocket-launch photo unlike any you’ve seen before:

Read more
Astronaut’s first photo of 2025 is a real stunner
An aurora viewed from the space station.

NASA astronaut Don Pettit has started 2025 with a stunning Earth photo that he described as a “New Year’s light show.”

Pettit captured the amazing image from the International Space Station (ISS), where he’s been living and working since September in his fourth trip to space.

Read more
With 16 sunrises a day, when does it become 2025 on the space station?
The International Space Station.

Life on the International Space Station (ISS) is anything but ordinary. The microgravity conditions mean you spend most of your time floating around the place, and the views from the windows are special, to say the least. Popping outside requires donning protective clothing, and going to the bathroom is a more complicated process than back on terra firma.

And due to the ISS orbiting Earth at around 17,000 mph, astronauts stationed there witness 16 sunrises and 16 sunsets in every 24-hour period. So how will the current crew -- NASA astronauts Suni Williams, Butch Wilmore, Don Pettit, and Nick Hague, together with Russian cosmonauts Aleksandr Gorbunov, Alexey Ovchinin, and Ivan Vagner -- know when to celebrate the arrival of 2025?

Read more