Satellite Snapshots
NOAA-21 captured imagery of the devastating power loss across East Texas following Hurricane Beryl’s landfall.
Earth from Orbit
Hurricane Beryl, the first hurricane of the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, rapidly strengthened to a Category 5 storm unusually early in the year.
Feature Story
NOAA's new GOES-U satellite will be carrying a new instrument—the nation’s first operational coronagraph.
Feature Story
On July 7, 2024, NOAA's GOES-U satellite reached geostationary orbit above Earth's equator and was renamed GOES-19.
Satellite Snapshots
NOAA’s GOES East (GOES-16) satellite has been carefully monitoring Hurricane Beryl as it travels across the Caribbean.
Feature Story
Cool imagery from the GOES satellite series, a retrospectiveNOAA’s Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES) have been monitoring the Earth since 1975...
Feature Story
GOES-U, the latest of NOAA’s four advanced geostationary satellites, soared into orbit on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket at 5:26 p.m.
Announcement
NASA, on behalf of NOAA, has selected Lockheed Martin Corp. of Littleton, Colorado, to build the spacecraft for NOAA’s Geostationary Extended Observations (GeoXO) satellite program.