News

The Department of Defense said it no longer planned to shut down a program that makes satellite data publicly available to ...
Louisiana meteorologists and weather experts criticized the decision to cut the satellites and joined others across the ...
Microwave satellite data that are key to capturing changes in a hurricane’s strength will not be taken from meteorologists as ...
The DMSP was created in the 1960s to provide global weather and space information to the Defense Department, which has long ...
After announcing it would lose access to key weather satellite data, NOAA will retain access, the agency said in a statement.
Satellite data that are useful for weather forecasting—and particularly crucial to monitoring hurricanes—will not be cut off by the Department of Defense at the end of the month as originally planned.
The Butterfly Effect is the chaos-theory idea that the flapping of an insect’s tiny wings can influence massive weather events far removed from it in distance and time.
After an initial plan to cut the data off in late June, the Pentagon extended that timeline to July 31 as forecasters raised concern that any loss of data could increase the risks rapidly intensifying ...
Data stream from aging sensor to continue after public backlash and amateur workaround The US Navy has announced plans to ...
Lawmakers from both parties have so far rejected steep cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) ...