Astronauts track huge dust clouds over Canada and US | On the ISS this week June 2-6, 2025

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Jun 25

Preparations for the arrival of a visiting crew, the continued study of how humans adapt to the microgravity environment of space, the service of systems on board a docked cargo ship and the documentation of European landmarks from Earth orbit kept the seven astronauts and cosmonauts on the International Space Station (ISS) busy this week (June 2 through June 6), the sixth week of Expedition 73.

Orbital observation

“I noticed smoke over the Northern U.S. and Canada a few days ago, and it took me a little while to understand what it was. From our perspective, it almost looks like a differently colored cloud formation,” flight engineer Nichole Ayers, a NASA astronaut, wrote on X on June 3 after spotting the smoke from wildfires in Canada that has caused evacuations in thee provinces and affected the air quality across several U.S. states.

“The brown hue to the clouds and the fact that they overlapped the white clouds caught my eye. I’ve been trying to capture it daily to aid in understanding the smoke movement. I hope everyone stays safe!” Ayers wrote.

Smoke from wildfires can be seen spreading across Earth from the vantage point of orbit

Expedition 73 flight engineer captured this view of the smoke from wildfires in Canada stretching across and into the United States from her viewpoint aboard the International Space Station in June 2025. (Image credit: NASA/Nichole Ayers)

Science status

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