Tropical Cyclone Chapala intensified rapidly on Thursday and it is almost the equivalent of a major hurricane. At 11:00 p.m. EDT on Thursday the center of Tropical Cyclone Chapala was located at latitude 14.2°N and longitude 61.5°E which put it about 535 miles (865 km) east-southeast of Salalah, Oman. Chapala was moving toward the west at 6 m.p.h. (10 km/h). The maximum sustained wind speed was 110 m.p.h. (175 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 130 m.p.h. (210 km/h). The minimum surface pressure was 956 mb.
Chapala has a very well organized, symmetrical circulation. There is a well formed eye which is surrounded by a ring of strong thunderstorms. Several spiral bands are rotating around the core of the cyclone. The thunderstorms surrounding the eye are generating upper level divergence which is pumping out mass in all directions.
Tropical Cyclone Chapala is an environment that favors further intensification. It is over water where the Sea Surface Temperature is around 28°C. The upper level winds are light and there is not much vertical wind shear. Chapala could intensify to the equivalent of a Category 4 hurricane on Friday. After that time eyewall replacement cycles could cause fluctuations in intensity.
A ridge in north of Chapala is steering the tropical cyclone toward the west. That same general steering motion is expected to continue for another two or three days. On its anticipated track Tropical Cyclone Chapala could be approaching the area near the border between Oman and Yemen in 48 to 60 hours. It could be an intense tropical cyclone at that time.