Tropical Storm Nicholas soaked Texas and parts of Louisiana Tuesday (Sept. 14), disposing more than 10 inches of rain within hours of making landfall on the Gulf Coast as a classification 1 typhoon. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)s National Hurricane Center has alerted that the storm will bring heavy rain and trigger “dangerous flash floods” across Texas and the neighboring Louisiana, which is still recuperating from the rampage of Hurricane Ida only 2 weeks back. Southern parts of Mississippi and Alabama will also be hit. After making landfall early Tuesday as a cyclone, Nicholas has actually because been downgraded to a hurricane, center officials said.The heavy rain is the most threatening aspect of Nicholas, according to meteorologists. The storm has soaked up big quantities of atmospheric wetness from the tropics, as can be seen in visualizations launched by the University of Wisconsin-Madisons Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies.Related: Hurricane Ida from space: Photos from astronauts and satellitesThe typhoon made landfall near Houston, the home of NASAs Johnson Space Center, earlier today, but no info has actually been made available so far about the impacts on the area firms center responsible for managing operations at the International Space Station. Weather.com reported that the storm hit Texas with wind gusts of 95 miles per hour (153 kph) putting 11 inches (28 centimeters) of rain on the Houston cosmopolitan area within hours with more to come. In addition to the swelling rivers and creeks, storm rise submerged roadways and land in the vicinity of the coast. Power cuts impacted a minimum of half a million Texans and the states Governor, Greg Abbott, stated a state of emergency situation for 17 counties, consisting of the urbane Houston area.This visualization released by UW-Madison CIMSS reveals tropical wetness feeding the slow-moving Tropical Storm Nicholas as it nears the coast of Texas. (Image credit: UW-Madison CIMSS) Nicholas will impact lots of areas along the Gulf Coast, including Louisianas lively cultural hub New Orleans, NOAA anticipated. The storm is now anticipated to move eastward and route along the coast towards Louisiana, reaching New Orleans on Saturday (Sept. 18) as a tropical depression.Nicholas is the 6th hurricane of the 2021 Atlantic season. Given that satellite monitoring started, only 9 years have actually taped six and more typhoons by mid-September, according to University of Wisconsin-Madisons meteorologist Philip Klotzbach.Follow Tereza Pultarova on Twitter @TerezaPultarova. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.