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Severe Weather Outbreak, With Threat Of Strong Tornadoes, Forecast Through Wednesday

There is not much time to recover for some across the central U.S. as a new severe weather outbreak brings tornadoes, damaging winds and hail to the Central and Eastern U.S. Here's the latest forecast.
Severe Weather Outbreak, With Threat Of Strong Tornadoes, Forecast Through Wednesdaystory-preview

Dangerous Severe Thunderstorm Outbreak Unfolds As Tornadoes, Hail Hammer Multiple States

We followed along Tuesday as violent storms unleashed tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds across parts of the Plains, Midwest and South.
Dangerous Severe Thunderstorm Outbreak Unfolds As Tornadoes, Hail Hammer Multiple Statesstory-preview

Twister Picks Up Debris In Central Texas

This tornado was spotted in Taylor County, Texas, on Tuesday afternoon. Wind gusts up to 60 mph were associated with this twister, with up to baseball-sized hail.
Twister Picks Up Debris In Central Texasstory-preview

Severe Weather Maps Tracker: Radar, Warnings, Storm Reports And More

Track everything from current conditions, forecasts and potential impacts from the severe weather outbreak here.
Severe Weather Maps Tracker: Radar, Warnings, Storm Reports And Morestory-preview

1,300-Pound Van Allen Probe To Crash On Earth

Launched in 2012, Van Allen Probe A, and its twin Van Allen Probe B, studied the belts that protect from cosmic radiation, solar storms and solar wind. U.S. Space Force has predicted the 1,323-pound spacecraft will re-enter Earth’s atmosphere at 7:45 p.m. EDT Tuesday, but there’s a chance it could fall 24 hours before or after that time. Most of it is expected to burn up in the atmosphere, but components could survive and crash into the Earth. The chance of it harming anyone on Earth is 1 in 4,200, NASA says. Van Allen Probe B is not expected to re-enter before 2030.
1,300-Pound Van Allen Probe To Crash On Earthstory-preview