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New satellite data shows parts of New Orleans are sinking fast, including floodwalls meant to protect the city from storms.
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.
Henriette was a tropical storm in the North Pacific Ocean late Wednesday Hawaii time, the National Hurricane Center said in ...
The Defense Department and NOAA will continue sharing satellite weather data, crucial for accurate forecasts and public ...
Ground radar, weather balloons, Hurricane Hunter aircraft and data from other satellites will continue to support forecasting through this transition. Why the satellite program shutdown now?
The Navy will continue sharing data with NOAA from satellites that the service had planned to start phasing out on July 31.
The U.S. Defense Department has decided not to end the dispersal of key satellite weather data on Friday as planned. The ...
Invest 93L is expected to move onshore in Louisiana later today. Will it be a depression? Tropical Storm Dexter?
NASA announced Wednesday it, in a partnership with the Indian Space Research Organization, has launched a radar system to map ...
Invest 93L is likely to make landfall in Louisiana as a tropical rainstorm, with a low chance of strengthening into a ...
AccuWeather hurricane experts are predicting three to five named storms will form across the Atlantic basin during August.