Tropical Cyclone Ernie intensified very rapidly into the equivalent of a major hurricane during the past few hours. Ernie strengthened from a tropical low to the equivalent of a major hurricane in one day which is an extremely rapid rate of intensification. At 8:00 a.m. EDT on Friday the center of Tropical Cyclone Ernie was located at latitude 15.5°S and longitude 110.2°E which put it about 485 miles (780 km) north-northwest of Exmouth, Australia. Ernie was moving toward the south at 6 m.p.h. (10 km/h). The maximum sustained wind speed was 125 m.p.h. (200 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 175 m.p.h. (290 km/h). The minimum surface pressure was 936 mb.
Tropical Cyclone Ernie is a very small well organized storm. It has a small eye surrounded by a ring of very strong thunderstorms. The strongest winds are occurring in the ring of storms around the eye. Additional bands of thunderstorms are revolving around the core of Ernie. The thunderstorms in the core of Tropical Cyclone Ernie are generating strong upper level divergence which is pumping out mass and caused the surface pressure to decrease very rapidly. Winds to hurricane/typhoon force extend out about 18 miles (30 km) from the center of circulation. Winds to tropical storm force extend out about 90 miles (150 km) from the center.
The Hurricane Intensity Index (HII) for Tropical Cyclone Ernie is 23.6. The Hurricane Size Index (HSI) is 7.8 and the Hurricane Wind Intensity Size Index (HWISI) is 31.4. Those indices indicate that Tropical Cyclone Ernie is capable of causing localized significant damage.
Tropical Cyclone Ernie is in an environment favorable for tropical cyclones. It is moving over water where the Sea Surface Temperature (SST) is near 30°C. An upper level ridge centered southeast of Ernie is producing northerly winds which are blowing toward the tropical cyclone but the vertical wind shear is currently having no effect on it. Tropical Cyclone Ernie could intensify more during the next 12 hours. Ernie will move into an area of cooler SSTs and stronger vertical winds in a day or so. The less favorable environment will cause Tropical Cyclone Ernie to weaken. Tropical Cyclone Ernie could weaken quickly because of its small size, if the vertical wind shear increases rapidly.
A subtropical ridge southeast of Ernie is steering the tropical cyclone slowly toward the south. The ridge is forecast to strengthen and extend toward the west. When the ridge strengthens it is likely to steer Tropical Storm Ernie more toward the west. On its anticipated track Tropical Cyclone Ernie poses no current threat to land.