Tau.Neutrino said:
Here’s stunning video of a ‘particularly dangerous’ tornadic storm from 22,236 miles in space
I have not seen anything even remotely like that before.
Looking up satellite GOES-16. Here’s another version of the same video.
GOES East Sandwich Imagery Of Supercell Over Lubbock, TX:
GOES-16 (GOES East) captured this powerful supercell storm near Lubbock, Texas, on May 5, 2019. This “sandwich” imagery combines visible and infrared imagery from the satellite’s Advanced Baseline Imager. The result is multi-dimensional imagery that offers spectacular views of storm attributes in rich detail. The mix of visible data and temperature from infrared imagery help identify key formations in a storm. The green, yellow, and red areas in this animation show the temperatures of cloud tops within the storm. The brighter colors represent colder cloud tops, which indicate areas of greater storm intensity.
For more videos from geostationary satellites see https://www.goes-r.gov/multimedia/dataAndImageryVideosGoes-16.html
These are not as good but more varied – lightning from space, dust storm, solar flare, ice movement, hurricane, storms.