Published: August 16,2015
To the west of Guam and Saipan is Typhoon Goni, which began a period of rapid intensification Monday morning (Sunday evening mainland U.S. time). As of 11 p.m. EDT Sunday, the U.S. military's Joint Typhoon Warning Center said Goni's winds had skyrocketed to 130 mph, a 40-mph increase from six hours earlier. This is the equivalent of jumping from Category 1 to Category 4 on the Saffir Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
Goni affected Guam and Saipan as a tropical storm with strong winds and heavy rain Friday through Sunday, and will likely threaten parts of East Asia late this week. Meanwhile, Typhoon Atsani is churning several hundred miles to the east of Goni and developing more gradually.
(SOUDELOR RECAPS: Impacts | Reports | Images | Rain Visualization)
Infrared Satellite: Twin Systems
With low wind shear, a moist atmosphere and ample ocean heat content, Atsani is expected to join Goni as a strong typhoon in the coming days. It's possible both typhoons could be equivalent in strength to a major hurricane (Category 3 or stronger on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale) at some point this week.
(FLASHBACK: Six Tropical Cyclones At Once)
Two Threats to Asia Ahead?
As Typhoon Goni continues to move away from Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands, rapid intensification is underway. The system may attain super typhoon status (sustained winds at least 150 mph) as early as Monday.Forecast Path: Goni
Twin Typhoons Outlook
Steered by high pressure aloft just south of mainland Japan, Goni may eventually pose a threat as a strong typhoon anywhere from the northern Philippines to Taiwan or Japan's Ryukyu Islands, including Okinawa, late in the new week ahead.
(FORECASTS: Taipei | Shanghai)
Parts of eastern China and the Korean Peninsula may be threatened early the following week. Goni appears likely to make a hard right turn toward the north, but it's still unclear how far west it will go before making the turn. An earlier turn would mostly spare eastern China, while a later turn would mean a greater risk for eastern China and the Koreas.
Of course, any scenario that takes the eye of Goni directly over Taiwan will mean significant impacts on Taiwan, but also a significantly weaker tropical cyclone for anyone affected by Goni after that.
But that's just the first typhoon. What about its twin to the east, Typhoon Atsani?
Current indications suggest the eastern system, instead of following in the wake of the first system, will instead track more toward the northwest in the days ahead.
This is expected to occur thanks to a weakening upper-atmospheric high pressure zone to its north. This would keep Atsani well northeast of Saipan and Guam, if it holds true.
However, Atsani may eventually pose a threat to mainland Japan late next weekend or early in the following week, if the jet stream doesn't curve it into the open waters of the north Pacific Ocean in time.
Sunday's late-morning computer model forecasts continued to disagree on this point, with America's GFS model favoring a sharper recurvature and a lower risk for the Japanese mainland, and Europe's ECMWF model favoring a more ominous track that could bring a strong and slow-moving typhoon close to Tokyo in about 10 days.
(FORECAST: Tokyo | Osaka)
Both models indicate there is some risk of Typhoon Atsani having some impact on the small Izu and Ogasawara island chains lying south of Tokyo and north of the Northern Marianas. Again, this is more than seven days out, and the forecast can and likely will change.
Whatever Atsani's ultimate path, it is likely to be an extremely powerful typhoon over the open waters of the Pacific. As of early Sunday afternoon, the five most recent runs of the American GFS model all showed Atsani's central pressure dropping below 880 millibars, or 25.99 inches of mercury – something that hasn't been recorded in a tropical cyclone anywhere on Earth since Typhoon Tip established the world record of 870 millibars in late 1979.
In general, the lower the central pressure in a typhoon or hurricane, the stronger the winds.
(MORE: Expert Analysis | Hurricane Central)
Interests in the western Pacific, including Taiwan, Japan, the northern Philippines and eastern China should monitor closely the progress of each of these typhoons.
Saipan and Guam Impacted By Heavy Rain, Strong Winds
Over the weekend, Goni affected Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands as a tropical storm.Tropical storm-force winds (39 mph or greater) occurred as the center passed through the islands. Off Saipan, a sustained tropical storm-force wind of 43 mph was reported just before 11 p.m. local time (7 a.m. EDT) Saturday. A peak gust of 61 mph was recorded there at 10:23 p.m.
On Guam, Andersen Air Force Base clocked a 49-mph sustained wind at just before 5 a.m. local time Sunday (3 p.m. EDT Saturday), with gusts to 58 mph, as a heavy rain band lashed the northern end of Guam. Guam International Airport near Hagatna, Guam's capital, gusted as high as 46 mph at 5:28 a.m. local time Sunday.
Winds have diminished considerably across these islands now that Goni is moving away.
Heavy rain arrived Saturday and continued Sunday, prompting flash flood warnings for Guam and Rota. Bands of locally heavy rain may continue into Monday for Guam and the Northern Marianas, though it appears the worst of it is now over with.
Guam International Airport reported 13.86 inches of rain Friday through 4 p.m. local time Sunday. (Guam is 14 hours ahead of U.S. Eastern Daylight Time.)
(FORECAST: Guam | Saipan)
This is the second tropical cyclone to affect Saipan in the last two weeks. The island is still struggling to recover from Typhoon Soudelor.
The Pacific News Center reported about 4,000 households in Saipan, or over 25 percent, have requested assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Power outages and a lack of running water and food have plagued the 44-square-mile island about 135 miles northeast of Guam since an intensifying Soudelor hit the island square on Aug. 2.
(WATCH: Saipan Struggles After Soudelor)
Guam's main newspaper, the Pacific Daily News, says some families on Guam are also recovering from typhoon damage – in their case, damage from Typhoon Dolphin back in May. Dolphin's eyewall passed over Guam, delivering gusts as high as 106 mph to the northern end of the island.
Active Northwest Pacific Typhoon Season
Including the two current typhoons and Halola, which migrated westward from the central Pacific basin, there have already been 16 named storms so far this year in the Northwest Pacific basin. Fourteen of those have become typhoons -- equivalent to hurricanes -- and five of those (Maysak, Noul, Dolphin, Nangka and Soudelor) became "super typhoons", packing sustained winds estimated of at least 150 mph.According to Colorado State University scientist, Dr. Phil Klotzbach, the Northwest Pacific basin had seen record levels of year-to-date tropical cyclone activity through early August, as measured by the accumulated cyclone energy or ACE index.
Senior meteorologist Nick Wiltgen and meteorologist Chris Dolce contributed to this report.
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