Japanese astronaut eyes typhoon from orbit | On the International Space Station Oct. 6 – 10, 2025

Science and maintenance work continued this week aboard the International Space Station, but updates regarding those activities have been all but halted by the U.S. government shutdown. Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui’s social media posts were the exception…

Orbital observation

Expedition 73 flight engineer Kimiya Yui of JAXA (the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) saw not one but two typhoons this week from aboard the International Space Station. (Typhoons are the same weather phenomenon as hurricanes: both are tropical cyclones. This type of powerful storm is called a hurricane in the Atlantic and central and eastern North Pacific regions, and a typhoon in the Northwest Pacific.)

“The eye of Typhoon 22 has become somewhat unclear, but it still appears to be maintaining its strong intensity as before,” wrote Yui on social media on Thursday (Oct. 9). “Typhoon 23 is a bit distant, but it is swirling with thick rain clouds on its southern side.”

“Stay safe while keeping up with the latest typhoon information!” he said.

a radial cloud formation is seen on Earth from above on a space station

JAXA astronaut Kimiya Yui, an Expedition 73 flight engineer, captured this photo of Typhoon 23 from aboard the International Space Station (ISS) on Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025. (Image credit: JAXA/Kimiya Yui)

Astronaut activity

a large robotic arm extends from a space station over the horizon of a blue and white planet

The International Space Station’s Canadarm2 robotic arm extends out in a test ahead of capturing a visiting spacecraft. (Image credit: JAXA/Kimiya Yui)

Yui worked with his Expedition 73 crewmates and ground controllers to check out PROX, a device that will be used when Japan’s next-generation cargo vehicle, the HTV-X, approaches the International Space Station for berthing.


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