The U.S. Air Force Reserve's "Hurricane Hunters" aircraft encountered severe turbulence and "stronger than normal" forces while entering Category 5 Hurricane Melissa, forcing them to turn back for ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. (The Conversation) – As Hurricane Ian ...
Hurricane Melissa just touched down in Jamaica a few hours ago ... but its effects were felt by meteorologist Matthew Cappucci, who vomited on camera while flying through the eye of the storm.
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Jason Dunion, University of Miami (THE CONVERSATION) As Hurricane Ian intensified on ...
Imagine you’re flying inside the eye of a hurricane and you behold the towering, swirling clouds of our planet’s most explosive force of nature right before your eyes. From June through November each ...
An intrepid storm chaser threw up while taking a bumpy ride through Hurricane Melissa. Matthew Cappucci, a senior meteorologist with MyRadarWX, was in the middle of trying to describe Hurricane ...
Hurricane hunters with NOAA give an inside look at what it is like to fly through Hurricane Ian. Courtesy: Nick Underwood/NOAA ...
(The Conversation) – As Hurricane Ian intensifies on its way toward the Florida coast, hurricane hunters are in the sky doing something almost unimaginable: flying through the center of the storm.
The U.S. Air Force Reserve's 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron-nicknamed the "Hurricane Hunters"-hit heavy turbulence while flying through Hurricane Melissa on Tuesday and was forced to turn back.