Typhoon Soudelor continued to intensify rapidly on Monday and it reached the equivalent of a Category 5 Hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale. At 5:00 p.m. EDT on Monday the center of Typhoon Soudelor was located at latitude 18.0°N and longitude 140.1°E which put it about 1020 miles (1640 km) east-southeast of Okinawa. Soudelor was moving toward the west-northwest at 13 m.p.h. (21 km/h). The maximum sustained wind speed was 175 m.p.h. (280 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 215 m.p.h. (350 km/h). The minimum surface pressure was 907 mb. The Hurricane Intensity Index (HII) for Soudelor was 40.4, the Hurricane Size Index was 13.6 and the Hurricane Wind Intensity Size Index was 54.0. These indices mean that Soudelor is capable of producing regional catastrophic damage.
The upper level winds around Soudelor are very light and there is almost no vertical wind shear. The typhoon has strong upper level divergence in all directions which is pumping out mass and causing the surface pressure to decrease rapidly. It is over water where the Sea Surface Temperature is near 31°C and the circulation is extracting plenty of energy from the upper ocean. The environment would support further intensification, but Soudelor is already a very powerful typhoon. Soudelor rapidly completed an eyewall replacement cycle earlier today and future cycles could produce fluctuations in intensity. Soudelor could remain a very intense typhoon for several more days.
A strong subtropical ridge is steering Typhoon Soudelor toward the west-northwest and that general steering pattern is expected to continue for the next few days. On its anticipated track Soudelor could be near the southernmost islands of Japan in three days, near northern Taiwan in four days and near the coast of China in less than five days. Although it is likely to weaken before it reaches any of those locations, it could still be a powerful typhoon at that time.