Some satellite eye candy from yesterday's tornadic supercells in southern Mississippi. You can clearly see the storms of the day with their broad anvils and persistent overshooting tops.
Stunning video shows an ultra rare phenomenon of iridescent clouds, which appears when sunlight interacts with lingering raindrops in the air after it rains.
On this day, 27 years ago, we chased what is well-known as the strongest #tornado in History.
This shows the F5 tornado near peak intensity, just after devastating the community of Bridge Creek, Oklahoma.
Aa freshman meteorology students at OU, we stupidly abandoned our Geo Tracker and took shelter under an overpass. Research was published that overpasses can accelerate the tornadic wind and be even more dangerous.
We then saw the terrible devastation in Moore, Oklahoma with horses wandering down the highway and people emerging from their destroyed homes. Over 50 people lost their lives from the May 3, 1999 tornado outbreak.
There was another massive violent tornado with a supercell to the north near Mulhall, Oklahoma that peaked after sunset.
The tornado outbreak was still going when I woke up for class the next morning at 7 am.
This is a day that Oklahomans will never forget. Enjoy the nice weather this May 3,
NASA HAS RELEASED OVER 12,000 IMAGES OF THE ARTEMIS II MISSION.
Unbelievable perspectives captured by the Crew! The aurora on the eclipse is incredible.
NEW video: https://t.co/nI0WTG0Nx1
In How to Skew-T, I take a deep dive into how to use skew-Ts for forecasting convective storms, their hazards, behavior and even appearance
She gave up alcohol a year ago, and everything changed.
Chips, salsa, and margaritas were Tiffany's favorite part of every weekend. Then she decided to go all in; quit drinking, started tracking her nutrition, and went hard on strength training. Tonight we celebrated one full year with an amazing meal out. She looks amazing. She feels amazing. She loves Mondays now. That says it all.
Also, I ran into a fan at Chase Field who used to watch me when he was a kid. Almost 20 years of vlogging hits different when the people who grew up watching you have real jobs now. ๐
I typically donโt shoot a lot of ultra-wide angle images because I donโt like the lens distortion.
Adobe is making me reconsider with their improved tools to correct it in post.
I shot this at 12mm and love having the ability to capture the sky almost directly overhead!
Check out my first ever news interview when I was 18 on the storm chase of the F5 on May 3, 1999 from Bridge Creek to Moore, Oklahoma. This was the very beginning of working with media as a storm chaser for the next 25 years
#stormchasing#Dominator#weather
Big hiring win today: after weeks of phone calls, insurance back-and-forth, and scheduling chaos, we FINALLY locked in a new driver. He starts tomorrow. Then, because Mondays always have a surprise, a semi breaks down and blocks the entire street. Air brakes locked up, governor valve issue, the whole nine yards. Dad had to improvise a fix just to get traffic moving again. Just another Monday. https://t.co/QhdhWqRYFm
Did you know that the Moon has color? ๐ ๐จ
At first glance, it looks gray, but through the lens on the right, its full palette appears: blue from titanium, orange from ancient rocks, and more iron on the far side.
This image was captured by Orion, the Artemis II spacecraft, during a mission that also broke the record for the farthest distance humans have traveled from Earth.
And thereโs something beautiful in that. The colors have always been there. We just needed the right way to see them.๐๐๐๐๐