Spectacular Satellite Images of Powerful Typhoon Soudelor | The Weather Channel
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Spectacular Satellite Images of Powerful Typhoon Soudelor

Typhoon Soudelor has been a ferocious storm since the beginning. Earlier this week it rapidly intensified into a super typhoon with maximum sustained winds estimated to be 180 mph by the U.S. military's Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC), making it the strongest storm on Earth so far in 2015. 

Given the tropical cyclone's extreme intensity, satellite images of it have been fascinating for many meteorologists sharing them on social media and elsewhere. Here are some of those jaw-dropping images.

(MORE: Soudelor's Forecast)

This first image in our collection shows Soudelor in incredible detail when it was a super typhoon Monday at 12:33 p.m. EDT. The image is from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) sensor aboard NASA’s Suomi NPP satellite. Soudelor's maximum sustained winds topped out at 180 mph on Monday afternoon.

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Credit: NOAA/NASA RAMMB/CIRA

NASA's Modis Aqua satellite snapped this unique view of Soudelor on Tuesday which uses the brightness temperature overlay (Band 31-Day).

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Credit: NASA

Below is another version of the first image from the VIIRS sensor aboard NASA’s Suomi NPP satellite taken on Monday.

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Credit: NOAA/NASA RAMMB/CIRA

Shown in this image is the eyewall of Soudelor on Monday when it was near peak intensity. Although no earth-based radar sites were available at that time, microwave imagery from satellites can give you a good idea of what the eyewall looks like.

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Credit: NRL
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An up close 250 meter resolution view of Soudelor's eye on Tuesday from NASA Modis Terra satellite.

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Credit: NASA

This spectacular shot of Soudelor was sent in a tweet on Tuesday by Kimiya Yui who is aboard the International Space Station.

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Credit: NASA/Twitter/Astro_Kimiya

Here's another view of Soudelor from the International Space Station (ISS).

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Credit: NASA

Wednesday morning, NASA's GPM core observatory satellite captured this three dimensional image showing the vertical structure of rainfall in Soudelor. NASA said that some storms within Soudelor reached a height of about eight miles with rainfall rates over three inches per hour.

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Credit: SSAI/NASA GSFC

Friday afternoon U.S. time (early Saturday morning Taiwan time) the International Space Station (ISS) captured this nighttime image of Soudelor as it was nearing landfall in Taiwan. It was sent in a tweet by Kimiya Yui who is aboard the ISS.

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Credit: Kimiya Yui

MORE ON WEATHER.COM: Forcefull Typhoon Soudelor  

A man dredges a sewer after Typhoon Soudelor brought heavy rain to Ningde, in eastern China's Fujian province.  (STR/AFP/Getty Images)
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A man dredges a sewer after Typhoon Soudelor brought heavy rain to Ningde, in eastern China's Fujian province. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)
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