1 00:00:05,071 --> 00:00:08,975 Beginning on March 24, 2023, NOAA satellites monitored severe storms 2 00:00:08,975 --> 00:00:12,812 that caused widespread damage from Texas to the Mid-Atlantic. 3 00:00:12,812 --> 00:00:19,519 The storms produced high winds, hail, flooding, and tornadoes. 4 00:00:20,687 --> 00:00:27,160 The first tornadoes touched down near Poolville, Texas, where an EF-1 tornado injured five people. 5 00:00:27,694 --> 00:00:31,031 High winds and 38 tornadoes were reported when the storms 6 00:00:31,031 --> 00:00:34,000 moved through Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee. 7 00:00:34,334 --> 00:00:37,303 The town of Rolling Fork, Mississippi was struck by an EF-4 tornado that 8 00:00:37,303 --> 00:00:40,874 killed 26 people in total, injured dozens more, and damaged buildings and utilities. 9 00:00:40,874 --> 00:00:45,178 The storm system also produced large hail over two inches in diameter in Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia. 10 00:00:45,478 --> 00:00:51,151 GOES East watched the storm barrel across the Southeast in near real-time. 11 00:00:52,752 --> 00:00:57,023 The satellite’s lightning mapper measured lightning with the storms. 12 00:00:57,023 --> 00:01:02,195 Rapid increases in lightning activity often precede severe and tornadic thunderstorms. 13 00:01:03,129 --> 00:01:07,667 GOES East also captured infrared imagery that revealed 14 00:01:07,667 --> 00:01:12,038 the structure of the storm and where it was the most intense. 15 00:01:16,109 --> 00:01:23,516 Meanwhile, NOAA-20 measured the cloud top height 16 00:01:23,516 --> 00:01:30,523 and captured images with its VIIRS instrument. 17 00:01:31,658 --> 00:01:37,797 When severe weather strikes, NOAA satellites will be on watch. 18 00:01:39,999 --> 00:01:42,969 Earth From Orbit: Violent Storms Tear Through the South 19 00:01:42,969 --> 00:01:44,537 Additional imagery courtesy of CIMSS and SSEC. 20 00:01:44,537 --> 00:01:45,872 NOAA Logo 21 00:01:45,872 --> 00:01:47,173 NASA Meatball 22 00:01:47,173 --> 00:01:48,241 CIRA Logo