Sandra Quickly Intensifies into a Major Hurricane

Hurricane Sandra intensified quickly into a major hurricane on Wednesday.  At 4:00 p.m. EST on Wednesday the center of Hurricane Sandra was located at latitude 13.0°N and longitude 109.9°W which put it about 685 miles (1100 km) south of the southern tip of Baja California.  Sandra was moving toward the northwest at 8 m.p.h. (13 km/h).  The maximum sustained wind speed was 115 m.p.h. (185 km/h) which made Sandra a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale and qualified it as a major hurricane.  There were wind gusts to 140 m.p.h. (225 km/h) and the minimum surface pressure was 967 mb.  Sandra is the ninth major hurricane to form over the Eastern North Pacific during 2015, which is a new record for that basin.

Sandra is a small well organized hurricane.  It has a well defined eye surrounded by a ring of thunderstorms, but hurricane force winds only extend out about 25 miles (40 km) from the center.  Thunderstorms in the core of Sandra are producing upper level divergence which is pumping out mass and allowing the surface pressure to decrease.  Sandra is an environment that favors further intensification.  It is over water where the Sea Surface Temperature is near 30°C.  The upper level winds are light and there is not much vertical wind shear.  Sandra could become a Category 4 hurricane on Thursday.

Hurricane Sandra is moving around the western end of a subtropical ridge to the east of it.  Sandra turned toward the northwest on Wednesday and it will gradually start moving more toward the north on Thursday.  A large deepening upper level trough off the west coast of North American will create southwesterly winds that will start to steer Sandra toward the northeast on Friday.  On its anticipated track Hurricane Sandra will approach the southern tip of Baja California on Friday night.