Sunday 5 October 2014

Typhoon headed for Japan


Typhoon Phanfone Lashing Japan's Amami Islands; Tokyo, Osaka in Cyclone's Path


4 October, 2014





Typhoon Phanfone is lashing Japan's small southern islands with strong winds, high waves and torrential rain as millions on the Japanese mainland brace for what looks to be a direct impact.


At one point on Saturday, the U.S. military's Joint Typhoon Warning Center analyzed 150 mph winds within Phanfone, designating it super typhoon. The JTWC has since reduced its estimate of those winds slightly.
The Japan Meteorological Agency, the official regional center for tropical cyclone forecasts in the western North Pacific, indicated 10-minute sustained winds as high as 110 mph within Phanfone Saturday, but has lowered its estimates slightly as well. JMA's 10-minute wind speeds are usually lower than the 1-minute wind standard used by the U.S.
As of Sunday morning local time, the strongest winds are being felt on the small Amami Islands, which are a part of Kagoshima Prefecture and lie north of Okinawa. The island of Kikaijima reported a peak gust of 42.2 meters per second (94.4 mph) at 5:45 a.m. Japanese time Sunday. (Japanese Standard Time, or JST, is 13 hours ahead of Eastern Daylight Time in the U.S.)
On Saturday, high winds were felt in the Daito Islands, which are part of Okinawa Prefecture. A wind gust of 101 mph was reported on Kitadaito (North Daito Island) before the wind observations were knocked offline. The other two observation sites on the islands, Minamidaito and Kyuto, gusted over 90 mph. Sustained winds maxed out at 57 to 64 mph at all three locations, safely below typhoon force, but the center of Phanfone was 120 kilometers (75 miles) away at its closest approach according to JMA bulletins.

Background

Infrared Satellite

Phanfone is now moving north and will eventually continue its right turn to move toward the north-northeast.
Although Phanfone is moving into an area of increasing vertical wind shear (changes in wind speed and direction with height) as well as cooler ocean waters, the storm will be slow to weaken and will still be a very intense system as it approaches the larger islands of Japan.

Japan Impact

Background

Phanfone Forecast Path/Intensity

Phanfone Forecast Path/Intensity
Phanfone has reached the western edge of a bubble of high pressure aloft -- and tropical cyclones often turn northward in those situations before eventually being forced northeastward by the prevailing upper-level westerlies, usually becoming post-tropical systems in the process.
The question remains exactly how sharp a turn Phanfone makes, and, therefore, what the exact track of the core circulation is.
Given Phanfone's large wind field and the latest forecast trends, Phanfone won't curve sharply enough to avoid at least some impacts from high winds over at least parts of central and eastern Honshu, and possibly western Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku and the northern Ryukyu Islands. 
Uncertainty remains, however, regarding Phanfone's intensity once it tracks near the Japanese mainland. Increased wind shear will induce weakening, but the longer the typhoon keeps its current intensity, the stronger it may still be once it tracks over Japan.
As a result, damaging winds may rake at least part of those areas this weekend, along with the threat of storm surge flooding in surge-prone areas.
Central and eastern Japan alone (the Kansai, Chubu and Kanto regions), including Kyoto, Kobe, Osaka, Nagoya and Tokyo, have a combined population of 85 million.
(FORECAST: Okinawa/Kadena AB | Osaka | Tokyo)
Here is a general timeline of when we expect peak winds (all times local):
- Amami Islands / Northern Ryukyu Islands: Through midday Sunday
- Kyushu, Shikoku, western Honshu: Sun. morning through late Sun. night or early Mon. morning
- Central/eastern Honshu (Osaka, Nagoya, Tokyo): Later Sunday into Monday

Rainfall Threat

Background

RPM Model Forecast

RPM Model Forecast

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