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Tracking the Eye of the Storm

Hurricane Katrina

Katrina was one of the most devastating hurricanes in the history of the United States. It is the deadliest hurricane to strike the United States since the Palm Beach-Lake Okeechobee hurricane of September 1928. It produced catastrophic damage - estimated at $75 billion in the New Orleans area and along the Mississippi coast - and is the costliest U. S. hurricane on record.

This horrific tropical cyclone formed from the combination of a tropical wave, an upper-level trough, and the mid-level remnants of Tropical Depression Ten. A tropical depression formed on August 23 about 200 miles southeast of Nassau in the Bahamas. Moving northwestward, it became Tropical Storm Katrina during the following day about 75 miles east-southeast of Nassau. The storm moved through the northwestern Bahamas on August 24-25, and then turned westward toward southern Florida. Katrina became a hurricane just before making landfall near the Miami-Dade/Broward county line during the evening of August 25. The hurricane moved southwestward across southern Florida into the eastern Gulf of Mexico on August 26. Katrina then strengthened significantly, reaching Category 5 intensity on August 28. Later that day, maximum sustained winds reached 175 mph with an aircraft-measured central pressure of 902 mb while centered about 195 miles southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River. Katrina turned to the northwest and then north, with the center making landfall near Buras, Louisiana at 1110 UTC August 29 with maximum winds estimated at 125 mph (Category 3). Continuing northward, the hurricane made a second landfall near the Louisiana/Mississippi border at 1445 UTC with maximum winds estimated at 120 mph (Category 3). Weakening occurred as Katrina moved north-northeastward over land, but it was still a hurricane near Laurel, Mississippi. The cyclone weakened to a tropical depression over the Tennessee Valley on 30 August. Katrina became an extratropical low on August 31 and was absorbed by a frontal zone later that day over the eastern Great Lakes.Click Here to view Katrina's NHC tropical cyclone report.

                                                                                                            

  Katrina Hurricane Research Division Products

 Mission Data

 Radar Data

 H*Wind Analysis

 Reconaissance Photos

Imagery

South Florida Landfall Radar Loop

Katrina Louisiana Landfall Radar Loop

Visible image of Hurricane Katrina approaching South Florida

IR loop of Katrina in the GOM as she intensified and had the "Perfect Storm" appearence

One more infrared loop of Katrina in the GOM at 1410z

Here is an impressive visible loop of Hurricane Katrina near peak intensity in the GOM at 150kts

Tracking Data

Visible Image of Hurricane Katrina in the Gulf Of Mexico

Hurricane Katrina Videos

                                                                                                                                                   

Current Conditions

Latest Miami, Florida, weather

Forecast at a Glance

Miami, Florida, weather forecast

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