NASA eyes warm sea surface temperatures for hurricanes

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This image combines data from various NASA satellites and shows sea surface temperatures (80F or higher) warm (orange areas) enough to power tropical cyclones. The darker the orange color the warmer the water. Credit: NASASVS
This image combines data from various NASA satellites and shows sea surface temperatures (80F or higher) warm (orange areas) enough to power tropical cyclones. The darker the orange color, the warmer the water. Credit: NASA/SVS

Sea surface temperatures are one of the key ingredients for tropical cyclone formation and they were warming up in the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean and eastern Atlantic Ocean by the middle of August. As a result, they helped spawn Hurricane Dean in the central Atlantic, and Tropical Storm Erin in the Gulf of Mexico, both during the week of August 13.


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All News summaries for August 17, 2007

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1 hour ago | User rating: not rated yet
(AP) -- Astronauts stepped out for the longest and hardest spacewalk of their mission Saturday to wrap up greasy repair work on a gummed-up joint at the international space station.

Astronauts face hardest spacewalk to finish repair

9 hours ago | User rating: not rated yet
(AP) -- Astronauts up on the international space station faced the longest and hardest spacewalk of their mission Saturday, a seven-hour-plus excursion to wrap up repair work on a gummed-up joint.

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Nov 21, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
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NASA scales back flagship Mars mission

Nov 21, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
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Nov 21, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
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