As Imelda continued northeastward over the Atlantic, it transitioned into a hurricane-force extra-tropical cyclone, with frontal boundaries extending eastward and southward from the central circulation. (5/5)
Deep convection can be seen within Hurricane Imelda shortly after it passed over Bermuda on the night of October 1, the reds and darker colors highlighting the deepest convection. (4/5)
Hurricane Imelda was a Category Two storm as it neared the island of Bermuda, while waning sunlight illuminated convection in the swirling storm. (3/5)
While Humberto maintained hurricane strength, Tropical Storm Imelda formed to its west and became a hurricane on September 30. The two hurricanes made quite the breath-taking sight off the coast of the United States. (2/5)
On September 27, 2025, Hurricane Humberto reached its peak intensity as a Category Five hurricane well northeast of Puerto Rico on its journey across the western Atlantic Ocean. The polar orbiting satellite Suomi-NPP captured a spectacular view of the clear eye of Humberto. (1/5)
Congratulations to @csuatmossci.bsky.social students and Electrical and Computer Engineering student Xiaocheng Wei, who will receive guidance from CIRA researcher Lixin Lu.
Following their dance together near the United States' East Coast, the last few days saw Hurricane Imelda absorb the remnants of Hurricane Humberto after its dissipation.