NASA releases images showing eye of Hurricane Milton

Hurricane Milton hit the southwest of the Gulf of Mexico, about 1183 kilometers from the city of Tampa, a city in Florida, in the United States.

NASA released images of the hurricane’s eye taken from the International Space Station (ISS).

See video:


Milton recorded winds of up to 257 km/h, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Floridians are bracing for the hurricane’s arrival this week near Tampa, where high winds, life-threatening storm surge and torrential rain are expected to hit the Gulf Coast for the second time in two weeks.

US President Joe Biden appealed this Tuesday (8) for people who have been ordered by authorities to leave now before Hurricane Milton arrives in Florida. The Democrat said it is a matter of life and death.

Almost unprecedented rapid intensification

Hurricane Milton rapidly intensified to a nearly unprecedented level, reaching Category 5 status due to record heat in the waters of the Gulf of Mexico.

It is expected to grow in size, meaning that while it may shrink in category, its dangerous impacts will be spread over a much larger area.

The storm is expected to reach the Gulf Coast of Florida on Wednesday (9). The eye of the hurricane could land anywhere along the Florida coast: from Cedar Key in the north to Naples in the south, possibly including the Tampa or Ft. Myers areas.

Recently, Hurricane Helene made landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast as a storm surge and made landfall in the swamp region as a Category 4 hurricane.

Authorities are asking residents — still recovering from the damage — to evacuate or prepare for another life-threatening storm.

This content was originally published in NASA publishes images showing the eye of Hurricane Milton on the CNN Brasil website.

Source: CNN Brasil

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