Updated
Updated · Science@NASA · May 7
Landsat 8 captures von Kármán vortex streets near Peter I Island
Updated
Updated · Science@NASA · May 7

Landsat 8 captures von Kármán vortex streets near Peter I Island

5 articles · Updated · Science@NASA · May 7
  • The image shows counterrotating cloud spirals over the Bellingshausen Sea, around 400km off West Antarctica, on an austral summer day in 2026.
  • NASA said the eddies formed as winds of roughly 18 to 54km/h were deflected by the remote, ice-covered volcanic island; stronger gales would disrupt their shape.
  • The following day brought more vortex streets and clearer views of the island’s 1,640m summit crater. Peter I Island remains little studied because of its isolation and difficult surrounding ice.
Are these atmospheric spirals a visible warning of the 'pent-up heat' now escaping from the Antarctic Ocean?
Can satellites that spot weather patterns predict the collapse of the vital ice shelves lying beneath them?
As Antarctica faces a climate crisis, why is the U.S. withdrawing its last dedicated research ship?