Super
typhoon Usagi, strongest storm on Earth in 2013, may strike Hong Kong
Sunday
19
Sepetember, 2013
In
the last 24 hours, a cyclone in the west Pacific has explosively
intensified, and is on a track towards Hong Kong.
The
storm – named Usagi – has achieved super typhoon status, after an
amazing burst in its peak winds from 75 mph Tuesday to over 160 mph
today. (Typhoons become “super
typhoons”
if their peak winds reach 150 mph or higher). It is now equivalent to
a category 5 hurricane.
Usagi
is now the strongest storm to form on Earth in 2013, more intense
than Utor
(peak winds of 150 mph) and Soulik (peak winds of 145 mph), also west
Pacific typhoons.
The
storm’s satellite presentation is immaculate, perfectly symmetric
and accentuated with a pin-hole eye.
As
it heads due west, it is expected to maintain its strength for the
next 24 hours. Then it might bend a bit to the north and begin to
gradually weaken according to the
Joint Typhoon Warning Center.
Track
and intensity forecast for super typhoon Usagi (Joint Typhoon Warning
Center)
Usagi
first has southern Taiwan in its sights. The center of the
storm is forecast to pass just south of Taiwan, but its northeast
quadrant – typically the most powerful, is likely to lash Taiwan’s
south and east coast. Copious amounts of rain, damaging winds, and a
substantial storm surge are possible there, particularly Saturday.
Coastal
Taiwan faces brunt of NE quadrant of #Usagi,
easily 20-30'' of rain due to orographic lift next 72-hrs
pic.twitter.com/SwZWkajumf
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By
Sunday, the Joint
Typhoon Warning Center predicts
Usagi may come close to Hong Kong, although considerable uncertainty
in the storm track means the storm could come ashore considerably to
the northeast or southwest. Peaks winds – at that time – are
forecast to have weakened to around 100 mph. But – until the track
comes into better focus – local impacts are not possible to
forecast.
See ALSO
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