Published: August 6,2017
Typhoon Noru has been pounding southern Japan with heavy rain and strong winds since Friday, and will also spread heavy rain northward through much of Honshu early this week.
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Noru was equivalent in strength to a Category 1 hurricane as of Sunday morning U.S. time (Japan is 13 hours ahead of U.S. EDT) and was centered about 170 miles south-southwest of Sasebo, Japan. The typhoon is moving north-northeast at 5-10 mph.
Current Storm Status
Noru Path History and Forecast Path
The Japan Meteorological Agency has issued warnings and advisories in much of Japan for various impacts including heavy rain, flooding, landslides and high surf.
Forecast Rainfall Through Tuesday
Noru has been a tropical cyclone for two weeks since first becoming a tropical depression on July 20. Here's a recap of what's happened so far.
Noru's Rapid Intensification Last Weekend
Noru strengthened from a tropical storm with estimated 70-mph winds (60 knots) to a Category 5 super typhoon with estimated 160-mph winds (140 knots) in just 18 hours from 8 p.m. EDT July 29 to 2 p.m. EDT July 30, according to the U.S. Joint Typhoon Warning Center.It's stint as a Category 5 equivalent didn't last long as Noru weakened on Monday, July 31.
(MORE: Stunning Images of Noru)
Last Week's Fujiwhara Effect
Last week, Noru teamed up with another tropical cyclone named Kulap in a meteorological dance called the Fujiwhara effect.Named after a Japanese researcher who discovered this in experiments with water in the early 1920s, the Fujiwhara effect details how two tropical cyclones less than 900 miles apart rotate counter-clockwise about one another.
Think of the teacup ride at Disney or the Tilt-a-Whirl at your local county fair, but with tropical systems instead. In the teacup ride, adjacent teacups can not only spin, but revolve about each other.
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While Kulap had degenerated to a remnant, one could still pick out its leftover circulation in Himawari-8 visible satellite imagery July 27 south-southwest of Noru.
Typhoon
Noru and the remnant of former Tropical Storm Kulap are shown in this
visible satellite image from the Himawari-8 satellite on July 27, 2017.
(Japan Meteorological Agency)
Last Tuesday, thanks in part to the Fujiwhara interaction, Noru
crossed its path from the previous week completing an oval-shaped loop.(Japan Meteorological Agency)
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