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Earth's Storms Influence Space Weather, NASA Mission Reveals

A NASA mission has demonstrated that terrestrial weather phenomena, such as thunderstorms and hurricanes, generate waves that impact outer space, affecting satellite operations.

person Luciano Carnevalini calendar_month 22 May, 2026 schedule 3 min read

It's fascinating how our planet influences the cosmos! A NASA mission has discovered that thunderstorms, hurricanes, and wind gusts on Earth don't just stay in the lower atmosphere. They generate invisible waves, known as atmospheric gravity waves, that travel to the edge of space. These waves impact it much like waves crashing on a shore, proving that our weather is a living, pulsating ocean in the sky.

By mapping these waves from the International Space Station (ISS), the AWE (Atmospheric Waves Experiment) mission has confirmed that Earth's weather extends far beyond the clouds. This connection is crucial, as it shapes space weather, a factor that directly impacts the orbital economy and satellite operations. Understanding this relationship helps us grasp how a disturbance originating in the atmosphere can have significant consequences in near-Earth space.

The data collected by AWE has been revelatory. The mission observed atmospheric gravity waves associated with extreme weather events like a tornado outbreak in the United States in May 2024 and Hurricane Helene in September 2024. Ludger Scherliess, AWE's principal investigator at Utah State University, noted that these findings provide a clear example of how intense weather systems can generate measurable responses in the upper atmosphere, demonstrating the interconnectedness of both environments.

Scientists also observed interesting differences between the waves generated by various storms. For instance, when observing waves produced by a thunderstorm in North Texas on May 26, 2024, they detected smaller, more irregular structures and a marked north-south asymmetry. This contrasts with waves created by storms in the same region earlier that month, offering valuable details about the dynamics of these interactions.

A particularly striking image released by the mission showed concentric atmospheric gravity waves caused by a severe weather event, including a tornado near the U.S.-Mexico border on May 3, 2024. During AWE's 2529th orbit on the station, waves were captured extending across Texas and Mexico in nearly perfect circles—a sight that, according to NASA, had rarely been observed with such clarity before this mission.

“for the first time, we can observe how a thunderstorm in the Midwest, a hurricane over Florida, or a gust of wind over the Andes generates invisible waves—atmospheric gravity waves—that impact the edge of space like waves breaking on the shore.”

The significance of these measurements goes beyond mere observation. Understanding how these waves alter the density of plasma in the upper atmosphere is fundamental, as these variations can disrupt radio signals between satellites and Earth, and even between satellites themselves. This effect can degrade the accuracy and reliability of systems essential for global navigation, timing, and communications.

AWE's data, recently published in the _Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres_, revealed that gravity waves with the greatest influence on the upper atmosphere have small horizontal wavelengths, ranging from 30 to 300 kilometers. This specific range is precisely what the instrument was designed for, underscoring the precision of its measurements.

Following its observation phase, AWE has been powered down to make way for the CLARREO Pathfinder experiment, its successor on the ISS. This new instrument will measure sunlight reflected by Earth and the Moon with an accuracy five to ten times greater than current sensors, promising even greater advancements in our understanding of the planet and its interaction with space.

Soon, the Canadarm2 robotic arm will remove AWE from its station location. Afterward, the instrument will be loaded into a SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft, which will disintegrate upon re-entry into the atmosphere. Despite its physical decommissioning, the data collected by AWE will remain publicly accessible to researchers and citizen scientists, ensuring its valuable legacy continues to contribute to the advancement of knowledge.

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