Start Date: End Date: Published Date Data Date
Summer 2023 Was the Hottest on Record
720 x 390 JPEG
Published September 14, 2023
June, July, and August were 0.23°C (0.41°F) warmer than any other summer in NASA’s record.
Related images:
2010 x 978 1 MB Bytes - PNG
720 x 325 GIF
3078 x 1389 392 KB - JPEG
Hurricane Lee Traverses the Warm Atlantic
720 x 545 JPEG
Published September 12, 2023
The major storm fluctuated in intensity as it approached the U.S. East Coast.
720 x 480 JPEG
2482 x 1655 4 MB - JPEG
2719 x 1813 2 MB - JPEG
Atmospheric Rivers Swamp Central Chile
Published September 1, 2023
After more than a decade of drought, strong atmospheric rivers in June and August flooded the foothills of the Andes in the Maule, Ñuble, and Biobío regions.
2728 x 1819 2 MB - JPEG
720 x 900 JPEG
1659 x 2074 1 MB Bytes - JPEG
Idalia Roars Into the Gulf of Mexico
Published August 29, 2023
Fueled by unusually warm waters, the hurricane is forecast to rapidly intensify before barreling into Florida.
2263 x 1509 1 MB Bytes - JPEG
3242 x 2161 3 MB - JPEG
Heat Dome Descends on Central U.S.
Published August 25, 2023
Extreme temperatures and humidity affected millions of people in the Midwest, Great Plains, and South in August 2023.
2869 x 1913 3 MB - JPEG
July 2023 Was the Hottest Month on Record
Published August 14, 2023
Earth in July 2023 was 1.18°C (2.12°F) warmer than the average for the month, and warmer than any other month in the 143-year record.
Relentless Heat in the Southwest
Published July 27, 2023
The desert Southwest endured more than three weeks of extreme temperatures in July 2023.
2451 x 1634 2 MB - JPEG