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Severe Storms

Every day, severe storms impact life and property by causing flooding, damaging winds and hail, lightning strikes, and more. NASA develops instruments and missions to observe these sometimes destructive events from space, the air, and the ground – information that U.S. and international weather forecasting agencies use to improve forecasts and help keep us safe.  

The view of Hurricane Milton from the space station.

Where Does NASA Fit?

Severe storms create significant hazards around the world, endangering humans and other living things and threatening property and infrastructure. NASA remote sensing instruments measure meteorological conditions, track storm lifespans, and gather data on their impacts from space, in the air, and the ground. These observations help researchers better understand the atmosphere and develop computer models to study future storms. NASA frequently partners with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to develop, launch, and manage satellites and instruments that contribute to storm research. The data fuels weather forecasting by NOAA, the U.S. Department of Defense, and other institutions, and gives researchers and decisionmakers critical information to understand, anticipate, and respond to severe storms.  

NASA Mission: JAXA Global Precipitation Measurement

The joint NASA-JAXA Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) satellite mission measures Earth's rain and snowfall for the benefit of humanity.

How NASA Helps

  • Earth Science Applied Sciences - Disasters

    The NASA Earth Science Applied Sciences Disasters program uses NASA Earth observations to reduce risk, improve response, hasten recovery and promote resilience from natural and technological disasters around the world.

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    The image is grayscale of a coastal landscape with an overlay of land movement colored in shades of pale yellow to red. The image is centered on a spot that shows significant landside movement on the provided scale, which is as much as 10 centimeters per week.  There are buildings labeled in this area or Rancho Palos Verdes and the region of movement expands outside of the 2007 boundary labeled by California Geological Survey.
    NASA radar imagery revealed that the active area of a decades-old landslide has grown following periods of heavy rainfall in 2023 and early 2024.

  • NASA AI, Open Science Advance Disaster Research and Recovery

    NASA scientists work with IBM to develop open-source artificial intelligence models that are trained on NASA’s expansive repository of satellite imagery. The models help communities make more informed decisions on planning for and responding to disasters such as hurricanes.

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    Satellite imagery of the reduced nighttime lights in New Orleans, Louisiana, on August 31, 2021, following Hurricane Ida.
    NASA Earth Observatory images by Joshua Stevens, using Black Marble data courtesy of Ranjay Shrestha/NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey.

Severe Storm News

Explore NASA's media galleries to view and download high-resolution images of the solar system, agency missions, and more.

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Global Collaboration Leads to New Discoveries in Lightning Research

4 min read

SWOT Satellite Catches Coastal Flooding During California Storms

The Oder River moves through a verdant green Poland. The city of Wrocław sits on the banks of the river in the upper left corner. Opole on one of the branches in the lower right. The river stretches diagonally across the image between the two cities and is unusually wide, creating many islands of what is usually small meanders.

Rivers in Europe Burst Their Banks

Torrential rain from a stalled storm system caused flooding in countries such as Poland and Slovakia.

Multiple lightning strikes span the stretch from open waters to peach and somewhat purple color skies. color

A New Look at Earth’s Lightning

A sensor installed on the International Space Station is yielding fresh insights on the global distribution of lightning.

Show Me the Data

Current Research

GPM Core Observatory Instruments

Two unique instruments form the heart of the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Core Observatory satellite: The GPM Microwave Imager, a passive multi-channel microwave radiometer that measures light to heavy precipitation; and the active Dual-frequency Precipitation Radar, which assesses atmospheric precipitation characteristics in three dimensions.

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