MiamiLedgerest. 2026
← Exit SkyLedger::SkyViewv0.1 · GOES-19 · 22,236 mi up
src: NOAA · NASA Worldview● online→ Wire

Sky View

There is, in fact, a camera in the sky always looking at Florida. Live imagery from GOES-19 — NOAA's geostationary satellite parked over the equator. Free. No keys. Auto-refreshing.

refresh · 60slive
GOES-19 :: Southeast US sectorGeoColor · True color daytime, IR-blended nighttime
GOES-19 GeoColor imagery, Southeast US sector
Other angles · same satellite
GOES-19 Full Disk
Full DiskWestern Hemisphere from 22,236 mi up
GOES-19 Gulf of Mexico
Gulf of MexicoGoM + the Florida peninsula
GOES-19 Tropical Atlantic
Tropical AtlanticHurricane alley · West Africa to Caribbean
High-res :: Miami metro · MODIS Terra · today
MODIS true color, Miami metro
Miami metroNASA Worldview · 2026-05-02

how this works

The hero pane is GOES-19 — a NOAA satellite parked 22,236 mi above the equator, staring at the Western Hemisphere continuously. New frame every five minutes. Resolution is ~500m–2km — good for clouds, storms, and big-picture weather.

The Miami pane uses NASA's MODIS instrument from polar-orbit sats (Terra/Aqua) — sharper at ~250m but only one daylight pass per day.

Both feeds: free, public domain, no API keys.

GOES-19 imagery: NOAA STAR · public domain. MODIS imagery: NASA EOSDIS Worldview · public domain. Resolutions and coverage are atmospheric — this is the satellite that watches hurricanes spin, not the one that reads license plates.