This browser does not support the Video element.
MIAMI - As the East Coast of the United States braces for Hurricane Dorian, NASA engineer and astronaut Christina Koch, who is observing the storm from aboard the International Space Station, tweeted terrifying and awe-inspiring photographs of the hurricane seen from space.
RELATED: NASA satellites provide 3-D view of Hurricane Dorian’s clouds from space as storm strengthens
"#HurricaneDorian as seen from @Space_Station earlier today. Hoping everyone in its path stays safe,“ tweeted Koch.
Koch tweeted out four pictures capturing the horrifying scale of Dorian as it looms near the southeast coast of Florida.
NASA also captured jaw-dropping footage of Dorian from the International Space Station on Thursday when the storm was hovering over the Atlantic Ocean just north of Puerto Rico, posting the video to Youtube.
While the storm might seem surreal from space, it has left nothing but devastation for residents in the Bahamas where Dorian made landfall on Sunday.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC), said Dorian lashed through the Bahamas as a Category 5 storm with sustained winds of 185 mph.
RELATED: The devastating differences between hurricane categories 1 through 5
As Dorian slowly approached Florida, weakening to a Category 4 hurricane, the NHC said that the storm currently remains “nearly stationary with the two most recent aircraft fixes showing essentially no motion.”
RELATED: Florida has been hit by more hurricanes than any other state — here are the 5 most devastating
But the National Hurricane Center warned that motion will resume Monday overnight into early Tuesday and said those in its path should expect “life-threatening storm surge and hurricane-force winds."