For many on the east coast, Hurricane Arthur is an unwelcome visitor on the holiday weekend. But Reid Wiseman has a different view on the storm — literally.
Wiseman, an astronaut on the International Space Station, has been tweeting beautiful photos of Hurricane Arthur from space. He posted his first shot on Wednesday, when Arthur was still a tropical storm:
Just flew over TS #Arthur– hoping it heads to sea. Looks mean. pic.twitter.com/9IjqFFy35m
— Reid Wiseman (@astro_reid) July 2, 2014
Beautiful to the south, unwelcome #Arthur to the north pic.twitter.com/TJ6c4lS65o
— Reid Wiseman (@astro_reid) July 3, 2014
Hurricane #Arthur has grown an eye since we last met. pic.twitter.com/HBJoDrcNxQ
— Reid Wiseman (@astro_reid) July 3, 2014
#Hurricane#Arthur through a 10.5mm fish eye lens. Amazing to see nature at work. pic.twitter.com/iGM0Izw1DC
— Reid Wiseman (@astro_reid) July 4, 2014
Wiseman's German crewmate, Alexander Gerst, has also gotten in on the action. He's tweeting storm updates in both English and German:
Hurricane #Arthur's eye seen from #ISSpic.twitter.com/5aEpGFz5I6
— Alexander Gerst (@Astro_Alex) July 3, 2014
Enorme Gewitterzellen entwickeln sich in der Umgebung des Tropensturms #Arthurpic.twitter.com/uwNWN7QD1H
— Alexander Gerst (@Astro_Alex) July 3, 2014
This isn't the first time on the mission that Gerst and Wiseman have had fun with social media: After the US lost to Germany 1-0 in the World Cup, Gerst shaved the heads of his American crewmates and posted the video to YouTube.
Thankfully, the damage from Hurricane Arthur has been relatively small so far. The storm hit land in North Carolina on Thursday, but Pat McCrory, the state's governor, reported no deaths or serious injuries. Arthur is now back over the Atlantic Ocean but expected to slowly fade out over the weekend, leaving little more than ruing 4th of July plans in its wake.
And for Wiseman, the chance to photograph such storms is the realization of a long-held dream. In an interview before his mission, the first-time astronaut told NASA's website that, more than anything, he was looking forward to enjoying the view of Earth.
"I have thought about this for so many years," he said. "We see all these beautiful images that the astronauts have sent back from shuttle, Apollo missions and space station missions. But there is just something about climbing that mountain and standing at the top yourself and looking out."