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NOAA NESDIS Launch/Mission Info
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On April 7, 2025, GOES-19 entered operational service as GOES East
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In 2025, NOAA is celebrating 50 years of its heralded Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite program, known as GOES
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NOAA Satellite Missions
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Two Orbits, One Mission
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GOES-U launch webpage
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GOES schedule
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View GOES-19 (GOES East) imagery at the GOES Image Viewer
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The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season, which officially ends on Nov. 30, showcased near-normal activity
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ten notable events captured by these groundbreaking satellites
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record-breaking hurricanes
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On Aug. 29, 2025, Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and coastal Mississippi
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Erin became the first hurricane of the year
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NOAA is highlighting the capabilities of its Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) instrument
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As NOAA marks the first anniversary of sending GOES-U into space, we check in with the newest satellite in NOAA’s fleet
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NOAA satellites have been closely monitoring heat signatures and thick plumes of smoke (some stretching thousands of miles) from wildfires burning across Canada
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As hurricane season begins, NOAA looks back at how far hurricane observations from geostationary orbit have come since 1975
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NOAA satellites monitored potent and complex spring weather pattern
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NOAA’s eyes in the sky are ready for whatever the season may bring
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Next Generation Fire System (NGFS)
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Maintaining this “environmental intelligence” is critical to U.S. Armed Forces operations
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Satellites and Fire
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NOAA satellites monitored a large fire that erupted in Ocean County, New Jersey, on April 22, 2025, and quickly grew into one of the worst fires in the state’s history
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Take a look back at our world since last April 22.
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Watch the Earth from Orbit video
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From their orbits, NOAA satellites play a vital role in detecting and tracking severe weather
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NOAA satellites monitored a large storm system as it pushed across the Central U.S. in early March 2025
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A new video from NOAA SciJinks explains this phenomenon and how meteorologists can use information from GOES-R satellites to help predict if an El Niño pattern is forming
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Since Jan. 31, 2025, NOAA satellites have been closely monitoring a series of strong atmospheric rivers
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NOAA satellites are closely monitoring wildfires burning in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
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NOAA’s newest satellite, GOES-19, provided a beautiful view of Earth during the winter solstice.
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As the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season comes to a close on Nov. 30, NOAA looks back at its above-average activity
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NOAA’s newest satellite, GOES-19, has been monitoring an increasingly active sun, as we enter solar maximum of Solar Cycle 25
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On Oct. 29, 2024, NOAA shared the first imagery from the GOES-19 Solar Ultraviolet Imager (SUVI)
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On Oct. 17, 2024, NOAA shared initial imagery from the GOES-19 lightning Mapper
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On Sept. 14 2024, EXIS observed an X-class “extreme” solar flare that erupted from an active region of the sun that had just rotated into Earth’s view
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On Sept. 18, 2024, NOAA shared the first images of the Western Hemisphere from its GOES-19 satellite
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On Sept. 11, 2024, NOAA satellites monitored Hurricane Francine as it made landfall in Louisiana as a Category 2 hurricane
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Data collected from SEISS over the three-day time period from August 23–25, 2024, show a number of radiation belt disturbances
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On Aug. 14, 2024, NOAA satellites watched Tropical Storm Ernesto intensify into a hurricane
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In early August 2024, NOAA satellites tracked Debby
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On July 23, 2024, the GOES-19 GMAG captured a space weather phenomenon known as electromagnetic ion cyclotron waves
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NOAA satellites have been closely monitoring these blazes, including California’s Park Fire
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GOES East watched as a derecho ripped through the region on July 15
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Hurricane Beryl, the first hurricane of the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, rapidly strengthened to a Category 5 storm unusually early in the year
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GOES-U was renamed GOES-19
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GOES-U, the latest of NOAA’s four advanced geostationary satellites, soared into orbit on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket at 5:26 p.m. EDT from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
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NASA, NOAA, SpaceX, and GOES-U mission managers met on June 20 to conduct a Flight Readiness Review
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From GOES to GeoXO: Past Highlights to Future Horizons
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encapsulated the 20-foot-tall GOES-U satellite inside two payload fairing halves
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On June 6, 2024, NASA and NOAA hosted a media availability to view and photograph the GOES-U satellite
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View photos and video of media day
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We chose 23 selections to feature
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From their unique view, satellites can also observe the deep swirling hues and colors of the ocean
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Visit our art challenge webpage for instructions for submitting your art
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For us, every day is Earth Day!
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On April 8, 2024, the moon moved directly between the Earth and sun, completely blocking the sun’s light and causing a total solar eclipse
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On March 23–24, 2024, NOAA’s GOES-16 and GOES-18 satellites, and others operated by international partners, observed numerous flares erupt from the sun, including a powerful X-class solar flare
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GOES-U will be the fourth and final satellite in NOAA’s latest generation of geostationary operational environmental satellites called the GOES-R Series
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NASA and SpaceX now are targeting Tuesday, June 25, for the launch of GOES-U
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Since late February, NOAA satellites have been tracking wildfires that spread through the Texas Panhandle
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As we leave meteorological winter behind, NOAA satellites have been monitoring the extent of ice coverage in the Great Lakes
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NASA and SpaceX are now targeting no earlier than May 2024 for the launch of NOAA's GOES-U satellite
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The latest video in the Earth from Orbit series highlights GOES-U’s arrival at Kennedy Space Center last month
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NOAA’s GOES-U, the fourth and final satellite in the GOES-R Series of advanced weather-observing and environmental monitoring satellites, arrived at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Jan. 23, 2024, to begin final preparations for its upcoming launch
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Learn more about GOES-U’s road to launch
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As we head into the new year, take a look back at some satellite imagery highlights from 2023
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